Trump administration finalizes rule to ease firing of federal workers

The Trump administration has issued a final rule allowing the reclassification of about 50,000 federal employees in policy roles, stripping them of civil service protections and making them at-will employees. Effective March 9, the change aims to improve government efficiency but faces strong opposition and legal challenges for potentially politicizing the bureaucracy. Critics warn it could undermine the nonpartisan nature of the civil service.

In October 2020, President Trump proposed a plan to expand his authority to fire civil servants who might obstruct his agenda. Five and a half years later, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) issued a final rule on Friday titled "Improving Performance, Accountability and Responsiveness in the Civil Service," realizing that vision despite widespread public resistance.

The rule targets "policy-influencing positions," estimated at around 50,000, converting affected employees to a new "Schedule Policy/Career" category. These workers would lose protections against arbitrary dismissal, including the right to appeal to the Merit Systems Protection Board. While agencies will identify positions, the president holds the final say. OPM Director Scott Kupor defended the move, stating that employees can hold personal views but cannot act as "conscientious objectors" or engage in "sabotage" that thwarts administration objectives. The administration insists changes are merit-based, citing issues like media leaks and resistance to executive orders, though it maintains they will not target based on political affiliation.

Public backlash was intense: OPM received over 40,000 comments during the review period, with 94% opposing the rule. Max Stier, president of the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service, criticized it in a statement: "This new designation can be used to remove expert career federal employees who place the law and service to the public ahead of blind loyalty and replace them with political supporters who will unquestioningly do the president's bidding."

Legal opposition is mounting. On February 6, 2026, groups like Democracy Forward and Protect Democracy announced strategies to challenge the rule, arguing it violates the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, which prevents a return to the 19th-century "spoils system." Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, called it "a deliberate attempt to do through regulation what the law does not allow." The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) is preparing a lawsuit, labeling it an "unlawful ultimatum."

Whistleblower protections are also at risk; reclassified employees would file complaints with their agency's general counsel rather than the independent U.S. Office of Special Counsel, which lost autonomy after Trump fired its leader. Currently, only about 4,000 political appointees can be fired at will, a figure Stier notes is already higher than in other democracies. Plaintiffs seek preliminary injunctions to halt implementation in early March while courts review the rule's legality.

This development builds on Trump's efforts to reshape the federal workforce, raising concerns about institutional stability and the balance of power.

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By year’s end, the civilian federal workforce is projected to fall from about 2.4 million to roughly 2.1 million employees, according to Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor. The cuts—championed by budget chief Russell Vought and the White House initiative dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, which Elon Musk led for the first four months—have targeted agencies overseeing health, the environment, education, and financial regulation while expanding immigration enforcement.

In 2025, President Donald Trump’s return to the White House coincided with a sweeping departure from the federal workforce, with about 317,000 employees leaving through firings, resignations and retirements by year’s end, according to the Office of Personnel Management. A crackdown on diversity initiatives, new performance pressures and uncertainty over job security left morale deeply shaken, as personal stories illustrate the human toll.

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The Trump administration announced substantial layoffs of federal employees on October 10, 2025, as the government shutdown entered its tenth day. Court filings indicate around 4,200 workers across seven agencies are receiving reduction-in-force notices. The move has heightened tensions in Congress, with both parties blaming each other for the impasse over funding and health care subsidies.

President Donald Trump has moved to downsize or eliminate the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, a small independent agency that has faced detailed allegations of wasteful spending and lax oversight. Investigative reporting by The Daily Wire, based on audits and interviews conducted a decade earlier, described a pattern of questionable expenses, self‑dealing, and perks for employees at the 230‑person agency, which was created to mediate disputes between unions and businesses.

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The expected savings from reducing sick leave compensation in the public sector are not materializing as hoped. Public sector employees are adopting strategies to retain their full salary despite the reform. Announced in October 2024, this measure aimed to curb costly absenteeism for the state.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has faced a year of disruption as the Trump administration moved to halt funding and lay off most of the agency’s workforce, triggering court fights that have temporarily kept some functions running while much of its supervision and enforcement remains stalled.

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As the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) approaches its 50th anniversary, disability rights advocates warn of a crisis in federal oversight, citing Trump-era staff reductions and policy shifts at the U.S. Department of Education’s civil rights and special education offices. They worry that weakened enforcement could erode protections that ended the widespread exclusion of children with disabilities from public schools.

 

 

 

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