After First Missed Paycheck, Federal Workers Call for Solidarity

The Trump administration moved around money (dubiously) to pay military servicemembers during the shutdown this week, but roughly 1.4 million other federal employees on furlough or working for no pay are going without, missing the first of what they expect will be many missed paychecks during weeks of political stalemate. With no end in sight, federal workers are drawing down their savings accounts and retirement plans, and getting help from family members, food pantries, credit unions, and a variety of other sources, according to workers, union organizers, and aid group staff.
Those with children and other family obligations are struggling the most. Some said that the nature of their job makes it impossible to take on short-term gigs, because they may be recalled on short notice.
“I’ve been told I may come onto ‘excepted status,’ which is working and not getting paid,” said Danny, a Health and
Related: As Shutdown Wears On, Trump’s Getting Blamed
“What should I do to supplement the financial uncertainty I’m going through?” said Danny, a former
“I think a lot about the unmet needs communities have and the work that’s still left to do,” he said. “I think about how, in this climate, we’re seeing the government take back and reverse progress we’ve made to public health and veteran access to medical care. That infuriates me.”
OFFICIALLY, THE GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN SHUT DOWN FOR 17 DAYS. Functionally, it has been shut down for most of Trump’s second term, thanks to deadly spending cuts and layoffs orchestrated by
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The 3,500 now-in-limbo firings—of workers at allegedly “Democrat programs,” per the president—represent less than one-fifth of 1 percent of the federal workforce, and even Vought’s latest threats only bring the number to 10,000. It looks more like a way Trump and Vought can claim to have carried out the threat in a minimal fashion, with a side benefit of thinning out departments Trump hates, like the
But executive branch employees have been under a much greater assault since January. The Trump administration is not giving the exact number of departures from the federal workforce, which includes those who retired or took buyouts, as well as those the administration laid off. Adding to the poor accounting, some agencies have recently begun hiring people back because they could not function without them.
Even without an exact number, the damage the job losses have brought to the Washington metropolitan area is plain. More people are selling their homes in
Food insecurity is up across the entire region,
Senators yesterday considered and rejected for the tenth time a House-passed bill that would officially reopen the government.
WORKERS TOLD THE PROSPECT THAT THEY EXPECT A LONG SHUTDOWN, with some noting that members of the House have been on vacation since
Some financial institutions responded to say that they are offering zero or low-interest loans to cover missed paychecks and other services, including America’s Credit Unions, which has a resource page for the shutdown, and the
As Cochems and his
Seeing the obviously political and potentially illegal video play on loop adds insult to injury for federal workers. “Why can't people just figure this out? It just seems like a blame game all around,” Cochems said.
State and local governments, aid organizations, and news outlets across the region have also published resources pages, including HillRag,
A few days into the shutdown, the maid of honor at Cochems’s wedding dropped off a bag of pantry essentials for him. He said he’s grateful to have a strong network that looks out for him when he needs it, but worries about his colleagues who won’t have grocery bags brought to them by loved ones. He described a sense that something about the situation was just wrong.
“I feel good about [the groceries], but I also feel embarrassed,” he said. “I’m a college graduate. I have a federal job in the best country in the world, the strongest country in the world, and people are having to give me food. I feel like I’m some sort of charity case.”
Dols urged federal workers to get involved in their union or contact the Federal Unionist Network for organizing help if they don’t have one. He remarked that 2025 has been a big year for new organizing in the federal sector. Danny, the former Marine, also urged fellow federal workers to keep up to date via the Federal Union Network’s Save Public Services email list.
Both encouraged the wider public to find their local No Kings rally on Saturday, which organizers expect will be even bigger than the first. Danny warned that bosses take their cues from the federal government and urged workers of all kinds to come together to stop the mistreatment.
“This overreach … it’s just the beginning,” he said. “We’ll see this trickle down to other parts of the labor sector.”
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