Skip to content
vom-news.com logo 2
Menu
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • Featured Edition
  • International
  • National
  • Jammu Kashmir & Ladakh
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Technology
Menu

White House Layoffs: Trump Intensifies Pressure on Democrats, Begins Federal Layoffs Amid US Government Shutdown

Posted on October 11, 2025
White House Layoffs: Trump Intensifies Pressure on Democrats, Begins Federal Layoffs Amid US Government Shutdown
News Desk | October 11, 2025 | Business, Breaking News, International | Google News icon Follow on Google News
White House Layoffs: Trump Intensifies Pressure on Democrats, Begins Federal Layoffs Amid US Government Shutdown

The White House said Friday it had begun mass layoffs of federal workers as President Donald Trump sought to amp up pressure on opposition Democrats to end a government shutdown that has crippled public services.

With the crisis set to go into a third week and no off-ramp in sight, Trump’s budget chief Russ Vought announced on social media that the administration had begun following through on threats to fire some of the 750,000 public servants placed on enforced leave.

The Office of Management and Budget, headed by Vought, told AFP the layoffs would be “substantial,” but gave no precise numbers or details of which departments would be most affected.

The president has repeatedly emphasized that he views cutbacks as a way of increasing pain on Democrats, and said last week he was meeting Vought to determine which of “the many Democrat Agencies, most of which are a political SCAM” should be targeted.

Democratic leaders in Congress have dismissed the threats as an attempt at intimidation and say mass firings would not stand up in court.

“Russell Vought just fired thousands of Americans with a tweet,” the party’s leader in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, said in a statement berating the White House for wreaking “deliberate chaos.

“Let’s be blunt: nobody’s forcing Trump and Vought to do this. They don’t have to do it; they want to,” he fumed.

“They’re callously choosing to hurt people — the workers who protect our country, inspect our food, respond when disasters strike.”

Unions representing 800,000 government employees asked a federal judge in San Francisco for an emergency order to halt the firings, ahead of a hearing set for October 16 on their legality.

A US Treasury spokesperson told AFP the department had begun sending out notices of layoffs while the Health and Human Services Department said it had started firing nonessential workers “as a direct consequence of the Democrat-led government shutdown.”

Education officials were also reducing their workforce, a source with knowledge of staffing decisions at the department told AFP.

Add VoM As Preferred Source

‘Tired of the chaos’

Public servants who hang onto their jobs still face the misery of going without pay while the crisis remains unresolved, with the standoff expected to drag on until at least the middle of next week.

Adding to the pain, 1.3 million active-duty service military personnel are set to miss their pay due next Wednesday — something that has not happened in any of the funding shutdowns through modern history.

“We’re not in a good mood here in the Capitol — it’s a somber day,” Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said at a news conference marking the 10th day of the shutdown.

Nonessential government work stopped after the September 30 funding deadline, with Senate Democrats repeatedly blocking a Republican resolution to reopen federal agencies.

The sticking point has been a refusal by Republicans to include language in the bill to address expiring subsidies that make health insurance affordable for 24 million Americans.

With a prolonged shutdown looking more likely each day, members of Congress have been looking to Trump to step in and break the deadlock.

But the president has been largely tuned out, with his focus on the Gaza ceasefire deal and sending federal troops to bolster his mass deportation drive in Democratic-led cities such as Chicago and Portland.

“The American people are sick and tired of the chaos, crisis and confusion that has been visited upon the country by Donald Trump and Republican complete control of Congress,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told a news conference. 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) meanwhile announced it would delay publication of key inflation data due next week to October 24, with the shutdown logjamming government data releases.

The consumer price index data is being published to allow the Social Security Administration to “ensure the accurate and timely payment of benefits,” it said. AFP

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by VoM News staff and is published from the syndicated feed)

Share this Post

FacebookTwitterLinkedInTumblrInstagramPinterestWhatsApp ChannelWhatsApp GroupRedditThreadsEmailTelegram

Latest Posts

  • Parents and Teachers Unite for Student Success
    November 4, 2025 | Featured Edition, Jammu Kashmir & Ladakh
  • “Weed Out the Fake Journalists”: After DIPR Verification Drive, LG Manoj Sinha Directs Officials for Mandatory Registration and Accountability of Online Media
    November 4, 2025 | Featured Edition, Breaking News, Jammu Kashmir & Ladakh
  • 6.3-Magnitude Earthquake Hits Afghanistan; 10 Killed, 260 Injured
    November 3, 2025 | Featured Edition, Breaking News, International
  • To Identify Fake Journalists, DIPR Launches Exercise in Budgam | Demand Grows in Jammu Division
    November 2, 2025 | Featured Edition, Breaking News, Jammu Kashmir & Ladakh
  • 1,500 Runners from 27 States and Abroad Participate in Kashmir Marathon 2025
    November 2, 2025 | Featured Edition, Jammu Kashmir & Ladakh
  • 21 Dead, Over 30 Missing After Landslide in Western Kenya
    November 2, 2025 | Featured Edition, Breaking News, International
  • Biggest Supermoon of the Year 2025 to Light Up the Sky on Wednesday Night
    November 1, 2025 | Featured Edition, International
  • Unidentified Drones Create Scare at Brandenburg Airport; flights suspended
    November 1, 2025 | Featured Edition, International
  • Pakistan Faces Acute Risk of Scarcity After India Suspends Indus Water Treaty: Report
    November 1, 2025 | International, Featured Edition, National, Politics
  • Meet Rob Jetten: Youngest, First Openly Gay Politician Eyeing Dutch PM Seat
    November 1, 2025 | International, Politics
?s=32&d=mystery&r=g&forcedefault=1
News Desk

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

vom-news.com logo 2

IMPORTANT LINKS

  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Grievance Cell of VoM News
  • Privacy Policy VoM News
  • Publish On Our Platform
  • VoM News Team
  • Who We Are (About Us)
  • Work With Us
©2025 VoM News Breaking Silence With Journalism