President Trump on Wednesday warned that federal staff must present as much as the workplace “or be terminated,” framing his administration’s so-called buyout affords to 2 million workers as an effort to shrink the federal government.
“We’re requiring them to show up to work or be terminated,” Trump mentioned in remarks from the East Room earlier than signing an immigration invoice into regulation.
“We think a very substantial number of people will not show up to work, and therefore our government will get smaller and more efficient,” Trump added. “And that’s what we’ve been looking to do for many, many decades, frankly.”
“We don’t want them to work from home, because as everyone knows, most of the time they’re not working,” Trump claimed Wednesday. “They’re not very productive. And it’s unfair to the millions of people in the United States who are in fact working hard from job sites and not from home.”
“As federal employees, they must meet a high standard. They’re representing our government, they’re representing our country,” he added.
The buyouts can be found to all full-time federal workers, excluding army personnel, U.S. Postal Service staff and positions associated to immigration enforcement and nationwide safety.
The supply sparked concern amongst worker unions in addition to some Democratic lawmakers who cautioned towards accepting a buyout.