Consider This from NPR - A week into the shutdown, federal workers are stuck in limbo
Episode Date: October 8, 2025It's been a week since a federal shutdown ground work at numerous government agencies to a halt. There's no indication that an agreement could come soon, as Republicans and Democrats in congress trade... continue blame. Meanwhile, federal workers are stuck in limbo, and its unclear when or if they'll be able to return to their jobs. NPR's Labor Correspondent Andrea Hsu and political reporter Stephen Fowler explain what's causing the impasse in congress and what's at stake for the federal employees caught in the middle.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Michael Levitt.It was edited by Courtney Dorning, Padma Rama and Emily Kopp.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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A week into a federal government shutdown, many government employees feel like they're twisting in the wind.
On Sunday, President Trump suggested federal workers were being fired because of the shutdown.
The Democrats are causing the loss of a lot of jobs.
It's a shutdown. It's their shutdown, not our shutdown.
The next day, White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt walked back that claim.
The president was referring to the hundreds of thousands of federal workers who have been furloughed as a result of this federal government shutdown, both here at the White House.
and across the entire federal government, at agencies across the board,
there are federal workers who are staying home.
And then yesterday, Trump and other top Republicans raised doubts
about whether furloughed workers would get back pay when the government reopens.
Stuck in the middle of all of these threats, like no back pay for furloughed workers, are those employees?
I think it's ridiculous. It's obviously illegal.
The law is very clear.
I think they're just making up threats to try to intimidate us.
Monica Gorman is one of the many federal workers who aren't working right now.
She's employed at NASA and is a member of the IFPTE Local 29, the employee union there.
She spoke with NPR in her personal capacity and said, even though her job may be at stake,
she is glad the shutdown is focusing attention on federal workers.
To see people in Congress taking a harder line, I feel like we're finally being heard now in a way that we weren't before.
Consider this. The federal government shut down a week ago and there is no such.
It will reopen any time soon.
Will federal workers pay the price?
From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
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The federal government shutdown.
Who's responsible?
How long will it go?
And who will suffer the consequences if it continues?
These are questions a lot of people have right now.
And it just so happens that NPR labor correspondent Andrea Shue and political reporter Stephen Fowler are two people with some answers.
Welcome.
Hi, Scott.
Stephen, I want to start with you.
And let's start with this idea that some federal workers will.
would not get back pay once the shutdown ends. Where does this come from?
So, Scott, there's a law in the books that says after a shutdown, federal employees who were
forced to work without pay and forced to not work because Congress couldn't fund the government,
these employees get back pay. That law was signed in 2019 after the record 35-day funding lapse
by then-President Trump. And here's what he said at the time.
I will make sure that all employees receive their back pay very quickly.
or as soon as possible, it'll happen fast.
Okay, that was then. He signed the bill into law. What's changed?
Well, Trump's second term has been all about finding different ways to have less federal government and fewer people working for it.
So after the shutdown started last week, the Office of Management and Budget removed a line from its frequently asked questions that noted this back pay provision and an internal draft memo was circulated with a contradictory view of the law.
Now, this draft memo argues that the hundreds of thousands of furloughed employees who aren't deemed essential to the government functioning aren't guaranteed their paychecks either unless Congress explicitly says so.
Andrea, what are you hearing from workers and unions about this back pay issue?
Well, they're not buying this interpretation of the law.
Many of these workers were around in 2019 when Congress passed the law and they fully expect to get paid.
And they tell me this is just another scare tactic.
A scare tactic to get Democrats to concede it in the shutdown.
Is that the thinking?
Yeah, and I spoke with Sarah Cobran about this. She's a longtime employee of the National Cancer Institute. To be clear, she spoke with me in her personal capacity, not on behalf of the government. She believes the Trump administration is just going to do what it wants, shut down or not. In fact, her agency has already gone through mass layoffs. Grants that she was overseeing have been cut. And this has happened even as lower court judges have found those moves illegal. So here's what she had to say about the new threat over back pay.
I believe this administration is behaving in a lawless way.
So when I spoke to my husband before it happened, I said, am I certain I'm going to be paid back?
No, because they're not following the law.
But I am certain that is the law.
And Scott, it's not just federal workers and Democrats who are saying this.
I mean, several budget experts I've spoken with say that the questions around back pay
and some of the other proposals the White House is tying to the shutdown are misleading at best.
Like Jessica Reedle with the Center Right Manhattan Institute, she says,
says as one example, the constant threat of mass layoffs because of the shutdown just doesn't
reflect the reality of how these reductions in force actually have to work or who ultimately
makes those decisions. It may be the case that we have more government employees at certain
agencies than is necessary, but reduction in force decisions should be made based on long-term
agency needs, not in response to a temporary shutdown. So, Andrea, just to be clear,
since we have been talking about this in so many different ways, about a week in, have there been any layoffs tied to the shutdown at this point?
Actually, no, not connected to the lapse in funding anyway. There have been layoffs last week at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, but those had already been in the works.
And federal employees have used this moment to point out that whatever layoffs happen now are really just an extension of what's been happening since Trump came back to office and launched his Department of Government and Efficiency.
I talk with Alexis Goldstein about this.
She's with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and a member of the Employees Union there.
She also spoke to me in her personal capacity.
She is still working, still getting paid because her agency's funding does not come through annual appropriations from Congress.
She says very little work is actually being done.
And it's been like that since early this year when the Trump administration first tried to dismantle the CFPB.
For example, the agency is not monitoring the banks, which is what Congress created the CFPB to do after the
2008 financial crisis. Here's how she put it.
We're just very hamstrung or like frozen in an ice cube.
And Scott, we have asked the Trump administration for a response to this kind of criticism coming
from federal employees. The White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson sent a statement saying
President Trump was elected by a resounding majority of Americans to carry out the agenda he is
implementing. And she said federal workers who are resisting the Trump agenda are working against
the American people. All right. So we're hearing all of these people who feel like their
paychecks or their future employment has been tied up as negotiating tactics. Stephen, where do
those negotiations actually stand? What if anything is happening right now? Well, Republicans in
Congress don't have enough votes in the Senate to reopen the government. They're not willing to
negotiate with the Democrats so far who want Republicans to extend health care subsidies for millions of
Americans. Meanwhile, Trump and his Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vote have been
trying a lot of different things over the last few weeks and have sent mixed messaging about
their purpose. Some interpret it as a pressure campaign while the administration says they're
simply taking steps to mitigate spending in a shutdown. Those are things like terminating energy
grants in places that didn't vote for Trump, holding up transit funding in Chicago and New York,
and the constant threats to fireworkers and or not pay them, which so far none of these things
have panned out or moved the needle in this shutdown fight.
NPR Stephen Fowler and Andrea Shoe.
Thanks to both of you.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
This episode was produced by Michael Levitt.
It was edited by Courtney Dorney,
Podmerama and Emily Kopp.
Our executive producer is Sammy Gannigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.
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