President Donald Trump is reportedly weighing the dismissal of “thousands” of federal employees as the government shutdown enters its second day on Thursday. The White House indicated that these layoffs could target agencies it views as misaligned with the administration’s priorities.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Thursday: “It’s likely going to be in the thousands. [T]hat’s something that the Office of Management and Budget and the entire team at the White House here, again, is unfortunately having to work on today.”
Leavitt added that these discussions would not be necessary if Democrats had voted to keep the government open: “Those conversations would not be happening if the Democrats had voted to keep the government open.”
She emphasized that the White House is not seeking negotiations with Democrats: “We haven’t wanted to negotiate. We just want to keep the government open. That’s been the Republican and the Trump White House position since the very beginning.”
Trump to meet Budget Director to decide cuts
Trump said on social media that he would meet with Budget Director Russell Vought to review which agencies should face cuts: “I can’t believe the Radical Left Democrats gave me this unprecedented opportunity.”
Leavitt suggested the administration may focus on agencies that it views as “a waste of the taxpayer dollar” or not aligned with its values. Trump’s approach aligns with Project 2025, a plan by the conservative Heritage Foundation advocating a major downsizing of federal government operations.
Scope of potential layoffs
The administration has already frozen funding for federal transit and green-energy programs in Democratic-leaning states. Trump has threatened additional firings and is reportedly on track to push out 300,000 federal workers by year-end.
Several federal employee unions have filed lawsuits attempting to prevent the layoffs, but courts have allowed firings to proceed during litigation.
Congressional standoff and shutdown impact
Neither the House nor Senate voted on Thursday due to the Yom Kippur holiday. Senate Republican leader John Thune said it is “unlikely” the chamber will hold votes over the weekend, while the House will return on Tuesday.
The government shutdown, the 15th since 1981, has suspended a broad range of operations including scientific research, financial oversight, and economic data reporting. Major benefits like Social Security continue, but approximately 2 million federal workers are affected, with 750,000 furloughed and others required to work without pay.
Democrats are pushing for an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, while Republicans insist the government must be funded before negotiations proceed.
government shutdown, federal employees, White House, Trump, layoffs, Donald Trump, White House on firings, white house on layoffs, Karoline Leavitt, Office of Management and Budget, Budget Director Russell Vought, Project 2025, Yom Kippur holiday
#Government #shutdown #White #House #signals #thousands #lose #jobs