logo
State Department firings will hit Trump admin's ability to tackle its own priorities, sources say

State Department firings will hit Trump admin's ability to tackle its own priorities, sources say

CNN17-07-2025
The mass firing of State Department employees could significantly impact the Trump administration's ability to address the priorities it has said it values, multiple former and current department officials told CNN.
Scores of personnel focused on issues the administration has said are no longer priorities were cut last week, including teams dealing with climate change, global women's issues, educational exchanges, refugees and Afghan resettlement.
But Friday's reductions in force (RIFS) also impacted offices working on issues prioritized by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, including counterterrorism, stopping drug trafficking, energy diplomacy and mitigating passport and visa fraud.
Political leadership has said the functions will be carried out by other parts of the State Department and were 'carefully tailored' to avoid impacting core functions. However, officials warn that a lack of continuity and loss of expertise could be dangerous.
'The loss of so much experience will make it harder for the United States to stop terrorists from successfully launching a major terrorist attack on American soil,' one former State Department official said.
There was also a sense of chaos as the cuts were implemented. Although some of the Washington, DC, offices hit by layoffs had been identified for elimination under the State Department's reorganization plan, sources who spoke with CNN said many of the firings came as a surprise to even managers.
Others said they had been given little to no guidance from political leadership on how to transition the work of the more than 1,300 fired personnel. A few people received notices they were being fired, only to have those notices rescinded hours later.
The office that assists the families of US citizen employees who die overseas had its entire staff fired, sources told CNN, leaving at least one grieving family in limbo.
Even some personnel from the office that helped to plan the logistics for collecting electronic devices from fired employees – and were doing so on Friday – got notices that they were being laid off.
Numerous personnel who were fired had worked at the agency for decades. Nearly 250 were foreign service officers, including some who already were set to serve in other offices.
'I had one friend who found out while she was midair' and checking something on the airplane Wifi, one former State Department official told CNN.
A senior State Department officials said last week that the reorganization 'looked at the functions that were being performed, not at individuals.'
In a memo Friday announcing the start of the firings, the State Department said the cuts had been 'carefully tailored to affect non-core functions, duplicative or redundant offices, and offices where considerable efficiencies may be found from centralization or consolidation of functions and responsibilities.'
However, sources say it is impossible to isolate the cuts to 'non-core functions.'
On issues like consular affairs, personnel processing visas and passports were not fired. However, cuts to other offices may have an impact, sources said.
Rubio had previously said that the State Department might expand the Bureau of Consular Affairs, which is responsible for visas and passports and helping citizens overseas, in order to meet demand for upcoming events in the US like the Olympics and the World Cup.
Top State Department official Michael Rigas on Wednesday told lawmakers that people who 'are adjudicating passports, who are doing the customer service work that we want to see continue were not reduced or eliminated.'
However, there were offices within the Consular Affairs bureau that had people fired on Friday.
The cuts come as the administration has applied new levels of scrutiny for those seeking student and exchange visas to the US.
The Bureau of Consular Affairs' Office of Fraud Prevention Programs saw significant cuts, sources said. That unit works 'to protect the integrity of all consular services from fraud,' according to a State Department article from October 2023.
'Effective fraud detection and prevention contributes to U.S. border security, facilitates legitimate travel, and protects U.S. citizens,' the article said.
'It's hard to square any of this with what the administration has been saying,' another former State Department official said.
They questioned how the bureau would be able to meet demand 'when you're cutting all of the support elements,' like cutting staff on the fraud prevention unit and contract management, as well as canceling assignments for people on their way to fill key posts.
They fear that if the remaining workforce is able to meet the increased demands in the short term by doing multiple jobs, 'it'll just reinforce the idea that we didn't need any of these positions,' they said, 'but in the long term, the amount of damage it's going to do is real concern to me.'
'The disconnect between what they're saying and what they're doing – it's a gulf,' they said.
Another bureau handling counterterrorism was significantly impacted by the reorganization. Some of its functions are being moved to other parts of the State Department, like bureaus that focus on regional or multilateral issues. Those bureaus may not prioritize counterterrorism, officials warn. Other functions are being eliminated entirely.
The office that focused on countering violent extremism had all of its workforce fired. This included those working to reintegrate foreign terrorist fighters in places like Syria or targeting racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism, such as White supremacist groups.
'Given how this administration loves designating new groups as terrorist organizations, you'd think that counterterrorism would've been relatively safe, but it was instead gutted,' another former State Department official said, noting that what remains will be a 'watered down' version without the ability to develop strategic plans.
The first former State Department official said that although terrorist designations will continue, the pivot to naming Latin American drug cartels as terrorist groups will increase the workload of those who make such designations.
On energy diplomacy, former officials say there is another disconnect.
Rubio earlier this year testified before Congress that energy will 'be at the forefront of policy for the next 100 years.' He said one of the reasons for that is that artificial intelligence requires tremendous energy, which means there will be 'strategic opportunities' for nations.
'We need to be at the table to have conversations about not just what our role in energy is but how we help invest or partner with countries that have a supply of energy,' Rubio said.
Rubio acknowledged that the Bureau of Energy Resources would be rolled into the economic bureau at the department as part of the restructuring.
However, another former State Department official who was fired from that office said that the number of people working on energy diplomacy at the department will decrease from about 100 people to 35 people and handicap the department's ability to deliver on an administration priority.
'Not showing up at international energy conferences will be one repercussion. That means losing out on real business deals. At those meetings we bring the asks of US companies to raise with senior officials from other countries. And at these conferences there is major Chinese participation. If the countries don't talk to us, they talk to China,' the former official said.
Meanwhile, anger is mounting within the department over the cuts and the way they were handled.
At one employee town hall for one of the impacted bureaus Tuesday, hundreds of anonymous – and angry – questions and comments poured in.
'Colleagues were RIF'd based solely on the position held on a certain day, merit played no role. How do you plan to regain our trust going forward?' one asked.
'It's hard to hear you ask for patience and team effort, when you decimated our teams and it does NOT sound like there was any advocacy involved to protect us,' another said.
During the town hall those questions from anonymous State Department employees were public for participants to see, but the leadership answering questions largely ignored them before ending the session, officials explained.
A number of townhalls for various branches of the State Department have been held in the days since Friday's mass firings.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democratic state Rep. Josh Turek preparing to launch US Senate campaign, colleagues say
Democratic state Rep. Josh Turek preparing to launch US Senate campaign, colleagues say

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democratic state Rep. Josh Turek preparing to launch US Senate campaign, colleagues say

Democratic Iowa state representative and former Paralympian Josh Turek is preparing to launch a campaign for U.S. Senate this month, according to three of his current and former Iowa House colleagues. Turek, 46, of Council Bluffs, has won two gold medals in wheelchair basketball representing the United States at the Paralympic Games. He was first elected to the Iowa House in 2022 and is serving his second term representing parts of Council Bluffs and Carter Lake. He would join a growing field of Democratic candidates vying for their party's nomination in 2026. State Sen. Zach Wahls of Coralville, state Rep. J.D. Scholten of Sioux City and former Knoxville Chamber of Commerce Director Nathan Sage of Indianola have all announced campaigns. Des Moines School Board Chair Jackie Norris says she is also seriously considering a bid. Turek declined to comment. But state Reps. Austin Baeth, D-Des Moines, and Timi Brown Powers, D-Waterloo, and former state Rep. Sami Scheetz told the Des Moines Register they have spoken to Turek about his plans and say he will announce his campaign in August. "He and I, I think have a shared vision of what needs to be done for the state and our country, so I'm going to be supporting his candidacy because I really do think that he is Democrats' best chance of winning the general election next November," Baeth said of Turek. Republican U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst is up for reelection next year. She has hired a campaign manager but has not formally announced that she will seek a third term in 2026, prompting speculation about her plans. Turek has experience winning difficult races for the Iowa Legislature. In 2022, he won his first term by six votes and won reelection last fall by about 5 percentage points in a race heavily targeted by Republicans. "Josh has been one of the highest-performing Democrats in the state," Baeth said. "He has won twice in a district that Trump won. And if you drive around Council Bluffs this last October and November, you'll see yards that have a Trump sign and a Turek sign next to each other because people see him as more than a politician." Baeth said he believes Turek has the ability to compete with the other Democrats in the race, even though he's announcing a campaign later than his competitors. "He's somebody who has been doing the planning behind the scenes and I think will make up ground pretty quickly," Baeth said. "And I think the reason for that is his candidacy is unique. He's not the typical cookie cutter politician." Brown-Powers said she believes Turek's work ethic is one of his biggest assets in a race where "to win this you have to give 100%." "This is a guy who gets out of his wheelchair and crawls up steps to knock on a door, so there's some grit and work ethic there," she said. "He's not going to be easily turned away by anything." Turek, who was born with spina bifida, has said his success has been possible because of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which was led in Congress by former U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin. His colleagues said Medicaid and health care access will be central pillars of his campaign because of his own experience. Medicaid will also be a major feature of the campaign because of Ernst's vote to pass President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" which includes tax cuts and cuts to spending on Medicaid and food assistance programs. The legislation extends and deepens tax cuts signed by Trump in 2017 while cutting Medicaid spending by nearly $1 trillion over a decade. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says 10 million people are expected to become uninsured over a decade as a result of the bill. "The big, beautiful bill or the reconciliation bill is going to be a huge focus of this upcoming campaign," Scheetz said. "And I think there's definitely not a better messenger on Medicaid and the cuts to Medicaid in our state than Rep. Turek." Stephen Gruber-Miller covers the Iowa Statehouse and politics for the Register. He can be reached by email at sgrubermil@ or by phone at 515-284-8169. Follow him on X at @sgrubermiller. This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register: Democratic state Rep. Josh Turek preparing to mount US Senate campaign

Moderate Democrats change their tone on Israel
Moderate Democrats change their tone on Israel

Politico

time10 minutes ago

  • Politico

Moderate Democrats change their tone on Israel

Hardline Israel supporter Sen. John Fetterman said Thursday he viewed the resolutions – which he opposed – as his fellow Democrats blaming Israel for the circumstances, while he blamed on Hamas and Iran. 'And that explains my vote, and my ongoing support. And that's not going to change,' he said. The Pennsylvania Democrat said he's seen the photos of starving children circulating online, but that, 'no one ever declared that it was an actual famine, to be clear.' Some former Biden administration officials argue Netanyahu's actions, rather than the political winds, are driving this change. They blame Netanyahu for hurting Israel's credibility with Democrats in the United States given his aggressive military action. Former President Joe Biden, a self-described Zionist, repeatedly called for a ceasefire between Israel and Palestine, but didn't heed calls from the left for an arms embargo. 'Yes, the political incentives for Democrats are shifting, but even more powerful for many Democrats is the recognition that a blank check approach to Israel, especially with this Israeli government, is fundamentally in contravention to our interests and values,' said Ned Price, who served as State Department spokesperson and deputy to the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations during the Biden administration. 'Bibi's prosecution of this war has, I think, made this shift in many ways irreversible.' A former Biden administration official, granted anonymity to speak freely about the political stakes, said a majority of Democratic senators voting to block weapons sales to Israel was unimaginable 'even a few months ago' and speaks to 'how badly Netanyahu has played this.' But the official cautioned this crisis is not as politically charged as was the Iraq War for many Democratic voters. A Gallup poll released this week found approval of Israel's military actions in Gaza had dropped to 8 percent among Democrats, the lowest rating to date. In contrast, 71 percent of Republicans said they approve of Israel's military force in Gaza, up from 66 percent in September. Changing public opinion on Gaza is most striking in New York, where Democratic primary voters nominated Zohran Mamdani for mayor despite millions of dollars spent attacking him for his anti-Israel posture in a heavily Jewish city. A vast majority believe Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Torres noted that 'if there is an erosion of support for Israel in the United States, that's not something the Israeli government should take lightly.' Chris Coffey, a New York-based consultant and longtime Torres ally said the deepening split between the left and moderate factions of the Democratic party can be attributed to images of starving children, and criticism of Israel's military action 'was a minority view now feels like the majority view in the Democratic party.' 'When (people like) Richie Torres, who is arguably the most pro-Israel Democrat in the country and certainly in New York, are asking tough questions then it's going to cause there to be some reflection and some ripples,' he said. 'It's going to force people to ask tough questions.' Eric Bazail-Eimil and Joe Gould contributed reporting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store