Guernsey Press

USAID workers scramble for answers after Trump pulls almost all staff off job

The order all but shut down the six-decade mission of the agency, which delivers humanitarian aid from the US to other countries.

Published

US aid workers around the world scrambled to pack up households or take children out of school under a sudden Trump administration order that pulled almost all of them off the job.

The order all but shut down the six-decade mission of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the government’s primary agency for delivering humanitarian aid to other countries.

In Washington, Democratic legislators and several hundred supporters of the agency rallied outside the Capitol to protest the dismantling of the independent government organisation that seeks to help people affected by wars, disasters, disease and poverty.

USAID
The US Agency for International Development, or USAID, in Washington, US (Carolyn Kaster/AP)

“Lock him up!” members of the crowd chanted.

They expressed frustration as well at Democratic legislators, who promised court battles and other efforts to stop the attacks on agencies and programmes.

USAID has been one of the agencies hardest hit as the new administration and Mr Musk’s budget-cutting team target programmes they say are wasteful or not aligned with a conservative agenda.

US embassies in many of the more than 100 countries where USAID operates convened emergency town halls for the thousands of agency staffers and contractors looking for answers.

Embassy officials said they had been given no guidance on what to tell staffers, particularly local hires, about their employment status.

A USAID contractor posted in an often violent region of the Middle East said the shutdown had placed the contractor and the contractor’s family in danger because they were unable to reach the US government for help if needed.

The contractor woke up one morning earlier this week blocked from access to government email and other systems, and an emergency “panic button” app was wiped off the contractor’s smartphone.

 Elon Musk arrives before the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington
USAID has been one of the agencies hardest hit as the new administration and Elon Musk’s budget-cutting team target programmes they say are wasteful (AP)

Despite the administration’s assurances that the US government would bring the agency’s workers safely home as ordered within 30 days, many feared being stranded in the field and left to make their own way home.

Their colleagues in Washington described reactivating employee networks that had helped in the past to bring local staffers out of danger zones.

The late-night order on Tuesday to abandon USAID posts worldwide comes as many of the aid workers abroad are locked out of email and emergency communications with their own government.

Most agency spending has been ordered frozen, and most workers at the Washington headquarters have been taken off the job, making it unclear how the administration will manage and pay for the abrupt relocation of thousands of staffers and their families.

The mass removal of thousands of staffers would doom billions of dollars in projects in some 120 countries, including security assistance for Ukraine and other countries, as well as development work for clean water, job training and education, including for schoolgirls under Taliban rule in Afghanistan.

The online notification to USAID workers and contractors said they would be off the job, effective just before midnight Friday, unless deemed essential.

Direct hires of the agency overseas got 30 days to return home, while contractors would be fired, the notice said.

Trump Netanyahu
President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House (Evan Vucci/AP)

Despite outcry from Democratic legislators, the aid agency has been a special target as the administration and Mr Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency look to shrink the government.

They have ordered a spending stop that has paralysed US-funded aid and development work, gutted the agency’s senior leadership and workforce with furloughs and firings, and closed the Washington headquarters to staff on Monday.

“Spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper,” Mr Musk boasted on X, formerly Twitter.

The US is the world’s largest humanitarian donor by far. It spends less than 1% of its budget on foreign assistance, a smaller share of its budget than some countries.

Hundreds of millions of dollars of food and medication already delivered by US companies are sitting in ports because of the shutdown.

Health programmes like those credited with helping end polio and smallpox epidemics and an acclaimed HIV/AIDS program that saved more than 20 million lives in Africa have stopped.

So have programmes for monitoring and deploying rapid-response teams for contagious diseases such as an Ebola outbreak in Uganda.

El Salvador US Rubio
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to journalists during a visit to aircraft maintenance firm Aeroman in San Luis Talpa, El Salvador (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

At a news conference on Tuesday, Mr Rubio said he has “long supported foreign aid. I continue to support foreign aid. But foreign aid is not charity”.

He noted that every dollar the US spends must advance its national interests.

The online notice says those who will be exempted from leave include staffers responsible for “mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programmes” and would be informed by Thursday afternoon.

“Thank you for your service,” the notice concluded.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.