US District Court Judge Carl Nichols on February 7 approved a decision requiring the US government to stop forcing thousands of employees of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to take leave, Reuters reported.
About 2,200 of the employees are employed directly by USAID. About 500 employees had previously been furloughed. USAID has also furloughed or laid off many seasonal employees, who make up the majority of the agency’s workforce.
Only USAID programs that prioritize US interests will be maintained.
On February 4, a notice was sent to full-time employees that USAID was planning to pay for overseas staff to return to the US, and was considering terminating the contracts of non-essential staff. The Guardian reported on February 7 that in a notice sent to employees on February 6, USAID said it would keep 611 essential staff.
People wave banners on February 3, while USAID headquarters is closed after a notice advising employees to work remotely.
Labor unions say Mr. Trump lacks the authority, written into congressional law, to prematurely dismantle a six-decade-old agency that handles international aid. USAID provides humanitarian assistance to more than 100 countries, including disaster relief, medical assistance, health and food assistance. As of 2023, USAID will have more than 10,000 employees worldwide, with two-thirds of them working overseas.
“Shut it down,” Mr. Trump wrote about USAID on the social network Truth Social on February 7, stating that the spending problem for this agency is “fraudulent and inexplicable.”
USAID is one of the agencies targeted as the Trump administration moves to streamline its apparatus and coordinate with the Office of Government Efficiency (DOGE) led by billionaire Elon Musk to review cuts to government programs and budgets.
Source: https://thanhnien.vn/tham-phan-ngan-chinh-quyen-ong-trump-dinh-chi-2200-nhan-vien-usaid-185250208073421212.htm






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