Most USAID workers fired, placed on leave
‘In the coming week, we will provide details on how to retrieve personal items from the former USAID workspaces and return government issued devices’
‘In the coming week, we will provide details on how to retrieve personal items from the former USAID workspaces and return government issued devices’

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Donald Trump has led an effort to dismantle USAID since he took office in January
Luis TATO / AFP/File
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Most employees at USAID will be placed on leave or fired by midnight on Sunday, the aid agency said, as President Donald Trump’s administration plows ahead in slashing government spending.
Around 1,600 workers based in the United States will be laid off in a “reduction-in-force” effort, according to a notice on the US Agency for International Development’s website.
All other staff directly hired by USAID will be placed on administrative leave globally, except those responsible for “mission-critical functions, core leadership and/or specially designated programs.”
The move is a step forward in Trump’s effort to dismantle USAID, which has more than 10,000 employees and operates an array of humanitarian and development programs around the world.
The agency announced earlier this month that all staff would be placed on administrative leave — a directive that faced legal challenges.
But on Friday, a federal judge lifted an order pausing the Trump administration’s implementation of plans to gut USAID.
In its statement on Sunday, the agency said that remaining staff expected to continue working would be informed by management by 5 p.m. (2200 GMT) that day.
USAID added that it will fund return travel expenses for staff based overseas.
“In the coming week, we will provide details on how to retrieve personal items from the former USAID workspaces and return government issued devices,” it said.
Trump and his allies — including billionaire donor Elon Musk — allege USAID is rife with “fraud,” but have provided little proof of the accusations.
Its budget of more than $40 billion is mandated by Congress, with its programs ranging from governance to life-saving food assistance.
The decades-old agency has, over the years, faced criticism in the aid sector for its overhead costs and questions on whether some of its programs achieve their objectives.
USAID has, however, also been a key US tool of global “soft power” — the ability of a country to persuade others through its attractiveness.