The Political Scene | The New Yorker

How Much More Can Federal Workers Take?

4 snips
Oct 15, 2025
E. Tammy Kim, a staff writer at The New Yorker focused on politics and labor, dives into the impact of the government shutdown on federal workers. She discusses the emotional toll on civil servants facing furloughs and layoffs while working without pay. Kim highlights the administration's mass layoffs as a tactic to shrink federal agencies and the subsequent threats to public services and democracy. She also raises concerns about financial hardships and the loss of institutional knowledge, warning that this crisis could fundamentally reshape the federal workforce.
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INSIGHT

Federal Workforce Wears Many Motivations

  • Federal workers show a mix of resignation and defiance, often responding with shrug emojis to repeated attacks.
  • Some stay out of commitment to public service while others stay because of specialized skills or nearing retirement.
INSIGHT

Shutdown Rooted In ACA Subsidy Fight

  • The shutdown stems from a dispute over extending ACA subsidies set to expire in 2025.
  • Democrats insist on extension, creating the impasse that led to the shutdown.
INSIGHT

Who Still Works And Who Doesn’t

  • Workers split into essential (working without pay), furloughed (at home, unpaid), and fee-funded (still paid).
  • Fee-funded units like parts of USCIS and Fed Reserve–funded staff can keep working despite the shutdown.
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