With Trump threats on back pay, another blow to public servants
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ Sidelined by political appointees, targeted over deep state conspiracies and derided by the president, career public servants have grown used to life in Washington under a constant state of assault.
But President Trumpβs latest threat, to withhold back pay due to workers furloughed by an ongoing government shutdown, is adding fresh uncertainty to the beleaguered workforce.
Whether federal workers will ultimately receive retroactive paychecks after the government reopens, Trump told reporters on Tuesday, βreally depends on who youβre talking about.β The law requires federal employees receive their expected compensation in the event of a shutdown.
βFor the most part, weβre going to take care of our people,β the president said, while adding: βThere are some people that really donβt deserve to be taken care of, and weβll take care of them in a different way.β
It is yet another peril facing public servants, who, according to Trumpβs Office of Management and Budget director, Russ Vought, may also be the target of mass layoffs if the shutdown continues.
The government has been shut since Oct. 1, when Republican and Democratic lawmakers came to an impasse over whether to extend government funding at existing levels, or account for a significant increase in healthcare premiums facing millions of Americans at the start of next year.
White House officials say that, on the one hand, Democrats are to blame for extending a shutdown that will give the administration no other choice but to initiate firings of agency employees working on βnonessentialβ projects. On the other hand, the president has referred to the moment as an opportunity to root out Democrats working in career roles throughout the federal system.
Legal scholars and public policy experts have roundly dismissed Trumpβs latest efforts β both to use the shutdown as a predicate to cut the workforce, and to withhold back pay β as plainly illegal.
And Democrats in Congress, who continue to vote against reopening the government, are counting on them being right, hoping that courts will reject the administrationβs moves while they attempt to secure an extension of healthcare tax credits in the shutdown negotiations.
If the experts are wrong, thousands of government workers could face a profound cost.
βSenior leaders of the Trump administration promised to put federal employees in trauma, and they certainly seem intent on keeping that promise,β said Don Moynihan, a professor at the University of Michiganβs Ford School of Public Policy.
βAccording to a law that Trump himself has signed, furloughed employees are entitled to back pay,β Moynihan said. βThere is no real ambiguity about this, and the idea only some employees in agencies that Trump likes would receive back pay is an illegal abuse of presidential power.β
A day after the shutdown began, Trump wrote on social media that he planned on meeting with Vought, βof Project 2025 fame,β to discuss what he called the βunprecedented opportunityβ of making βpermanentβ cuts to agencies during the ongoing funding lapse.
A lawsuit brought in California against Vought and the OMB, by a coalition of labor unions representing over 2 million federal workers, is challenging the premise of that claim, arguing the government is βdeviating from historic practice and violating applicable lawsβ by using government employees βas a pawn in congressional deliberations.β But whether courts can or will stop the effort is unclear.
Sen. John Thune, the majority leader and a Republican from South Dakota, said last week that Democrats should have known the risk they were running by βshutting down the government and handing the keys to Russ Vought.β
βWe donβt control what heβs going to do,β he told Politico.
The White House has sent mixed messages on its willingness to negotiate with Democrats since the shutdown began. Within a matter of hours earlier this week, the presidentβs press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told reporters that there was nothing to negotiate, before Trump said that dialogue had opened with Democratic leadership over a potential agreement on healthcare.
Donald Kettl, professor emeritus and former dean at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy, taught and trained prospective public servants for 45 years.
βWhat is happening is profoundly discouraging for young students seeking careers in the federal public service,β he said. βMany of the students are going to state and local governments, nonprofits, and think tanks, but increasingly donβt see the federal government as a place where they can make a difference or make a career.β
βAll of us depend on the government, and the government depends on a pipeline of skilled workers,β Kettl added. βThe administrationβs efforts have blown up the pipeline, and the costs will continue for years β probably decades β to come.β