After tens of thousands of employees voluntarily quit, the US continues its plan to streamline its apparatus by massively laying off employees in many fields.
The Trump administration laid off at least 9,500 federal employees this week, an unprecedented effort that shows no signs of slowing down to reduce the size of the bureaucracy of about 2.3 million employees.
The layoffs, which are mainly aimed at employees hired less than a year ago, have few binding regulations, according to Reuters. The layoffs come after about 75,000 employees voluntarily resigned with compensation.
drastic move
The wave of layoffs began on February 13 (local time) at agencies including the federal Office of Personnel Management and the Small Business Administration, with dozens of employees being laid off at each agency.
By the evening of February 13 and the following day, the pace accelerated. Sources said that about 2,300 employees at the Interior Department were laid off, including about 800 at the Bureau of Land Management. At the Department of Energy, about 1,200 to 2,000 were laid off, including more than 300 at the National Nuclear Security Administration. Notably, according to POLITICO , the Forest Service under the Department of Agriculture laid off about 3,400 employees, equivalent to nearly 10% of its staff. In addition, the Department of Agriculture also cut staff at research and lending agencies, but the specific numbers are unclear.
Protest outside the Capitol on February 11 to protest the policies of Mr. Trump and Mr. Musk
In the welfare sector, about 45% of newly hired but still considered probationary employees at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have been laid off. The AP previously reported that the CDC had laid off about 1,300 employees, or 10% of its staff. In addition, more than 1,000 of the 450,000 employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs were laid off. At the Department of Education , at least 160 newly hired employees have been given notice to leave. Mr. Trump has called for the agency, which has 4,400 employees, to be dissolved, but Congress needs approval.
Surprise, concern
The cuts over the past few days have caused confusion, along with concerns about the impact on related sectors. On February 14, an employee at the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development left the restroom when he was suddenly told he had been fired. When he returned to his desk a few minutes later, he was blocked from all computer systems.
Many are also concerned about the negative impact on many agency operations. According to The Washington Post , many Democrats and conservationists worry that staffing cuts at the Interior Department’s National Park Service will leave national parks short-staffed next summer, when they are expected to welcome more than 100 million visitors. At the Environmental Protection Agency, leaders said 388 people have been laid off, raising concerns about how this could affect efforts to protect people from toxic chemicals or natural disasters like the recent California wildfires.
Some cuts have targeted the administration’s priorities, with at least five immigration judges laid off on February 14, even though each judge handles about 500 to 700 cases a year, most of them involving deportations.
Legal battle
Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington DC on February 14 began hearing arguments from the parties on a request to prevent billionaire Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) he runs from accessing data from federal agencies and carrying out employee firings, according to AP. Currently, Mr. Musk and DOGE are being sued in 14 states for exercising "nearly unchecked" power. In New York, Judge Jeanette Vargas said she will continue to block individuals related to DOGE from accessing sensitive records of the Treasury Department.
Meanwhile, some Republican lawmakers have vowed to introduce articles of impeachment against judges who have blocked federal government actions, and have backed billionaire Musk's call for a "wave of judicial impeachment."
According to The Hill , Rep. Eli Crane said he is drafting articles of impeachment against Judge Paul Engelmayer of New York for temporarily blocking Mr. Musk and DOGE from accessing the Treasury Department's payment system. Rep. Taylor Greene pledged to hold Judge Engelmayer and others accountable for "attempting to thwart the will of the people and their elected leaders." In addition, Rep. Andrew Clyde is preparing a resolution to impeach Judge John McConnell Jr. of Rhode Island for his ruling blocking the government's federal funding freeze.
Source: https://thanhnien.vn/my-o-at-cat-giam-nhan-su-lien-bang-18525021521271063.htm
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