From The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject After First Missed Paycheck, Federal Workers Call for Solidarity
Date October 17, 2025 10:05 AM
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With no end to the shutdown in sight, workers are struggling to cope.Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here to get The Daily Prospect Monday through Friday. [link removed]

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**OCTOBER 17, 2025**

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Federal workers are sick of the Trump administration using them as pawns. They’re sick of seeing his administration destroy the programs they’ve devoted their lives to and they’re sick of all the harm the destruction has already caused, including shuttered hospitals and cancelled services for military veterans. Tomorrow, Saturday, October 18, federal workers across a range of departments will be out in force at the**nationwide No Kings rally** [link removed], and they’re asking workers everywhere to do the same. They warn that what happens to them will become the norm for workers of all kinds but say the fight is far from over [link removed]. Solidarity is our best weapon. Together we will win. 

**– Whitney Curry Wimbish, staff writer**

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BILL CLARK/CQ ROLL CALL VIA AP IMAGES

After First Missed Paycheck, Federal Workers Call for Solidarity [link removed]

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 Human Services Department worker who spoke on condition of using only his first name. Because he could be recalled at any time, he can’t commit to outside work or even plan his days, causing him uncertainty, stress, and frustration. He worries not only for himself, but for his aging mom, whom he supports. Like other federal workers, he received a partial paycheck last week for some of the days leading up to the shutdown. Now he’s thinking about borrowing against his Thrift Savings Plan, the retirement vehicle for federal workers, as some of his colleagues have had to do.

“What should I do to supplement the financial uncertainty I’m going through?” said Danny, a former U.S. Marine who served in active duty. He said he resents that lawmakers are using federal workers and veterans alike as “pawns,” and remains a steadfast public servant who takes pride in the fact that he swore an oath to the Constitution twice.

“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 [link removed], thanks to deadly spending cuts and layoffs orchestrated by Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought and former White House employee Elon Musk. Trump and Vought have been using the shutdown to torment workers. First, they threatened to not pay the 750,000 federal employees on furlough and several hundred thousand others working without pay when the shutdown ends, as legally required. Then they rolled that threat back. Next, they fired about 4,200 workers [link removed] across seven agencies last Friday, including 700 at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who were quickly rehired [link removed] due to an undisclosed error. A federal judge halted the rest of the layoffs [link removed] on Wednesday. Because of differing pay periods, about 750,000 workers missed their paychecks last week, and around the same number missed theirs on Wednesday.

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