The White House budget office has sent a memo directing federal agencies to consider preparing “reduction in force” (RIF) notices for a portion of their employees in the event of a government shutdown, as the Sept. 30 funding deadline nears without a clear path forward for congressional funding.
Republican lawmakers said the bill would allow more time for negotiations on the required full-year spending bills. Senate Democrats have opposed the bill. It requires enough support from Democrats to overcome the 60-vote supermajority threshold to avoid a filibuster.
If Congress does not approve funding for the new financial year by Oct. 1, the federal government will be forced into a shutdown.
“Unfortunately, congressional Democrats are signaling that they intend to break this bipartisan trend and shut down the government in the coming days over a series of insane demands, including $1 trillion in new spending,” the memo, provided to The Epoch Times by the White House budget office, states.
To prepare the government for an “orderly shutdown” in the event of a lapse in approved funds, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) said it was directing agencies to consider RIF notices for the portion of their employees supported by discretionary funds, which lapse on Oct. 1, in a manner “consistent with applicable law.”
“Programs that did not benefit from an infusion of mandatory appropriations will bear the brunt of a shutdown,” the memo reads.
Social Security, Medicare, and veterans’ benefits, funded by mandatory appropriations and essential funding for military operations, law enforcement, and air traffic control, will not be affected in the case of a shutdown.
The portion of agency employees engaged in programs, projects, or activities that are not consistent with President Donald Trump’s priorities could see a lack of funding in the event of a shutdown if other sources of funding, such as H.R. 1 (Public Law 119-21) are not available, the letter said.
“If Congress successfully passes a clean CR prior to September 30,” this will not be necessary, it states.
“Once fiscal year 2026 appropriations are enacted, agencies should revise their RIFs as needed to retain the minimal number of employees necessary to carry out statutory functions,” it also states.
The RIF notices would also be “in addition to any furlough notices provided due to the lapse in appropriation.”
The OMB asked the agencies to submit drafts of their RIF plans for review.
In the memo, the OMB noted that CRs are how Congress has funded the federal government for the past 10 fiscal years and avoided furloughs of federal employees.
“We remain hopeful that Democrats in Congress will not trigger a shutdown and the steps outlined above will not be necessary. The President supports enactment of a clean CR to ensure no discretionary spending lapse after September 30, 2025, and OMB hopes the Democrats will agree,” the president’s budget office stated.
The OMB also said that it held its first planning call for the potential shutdown earlier this week, as required by OMB policy, and that updates to contingency plans to direct agencies on how to handle a government shutdown would be provided as the end of the fiscal year approaches.
Negotiations
Negotiations between Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill to keep the federal government funded have stalled.Republicans, who were elected to Congress in November 2024 with a slim majority in both chambers, say the cuts solely targeted waste, fraud, and abuse, including health care for illegal immigrants. Democrats say more than 10 million Americans will lose coverage under the new laws, based on Congressional Budget Office estimates, with potential effects on small rural hospitals.
President Donald Trump on Sept. 23 canceled a meeting with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), saying on Truth Social that their demands were “unserious and ridiculous.”
Responding to news of the OMB memo, Jeffries told OMB director Russell Vought to “get lost.”
Schumer said in a statement provided to media outlets that the “unnecessary firings will either be overturned in court or the administration will end up hiring the workers back.”
Federal Downsizing
The suggestion to prepare for a reduced federal workforce aligns with the Trump administration’s stated plan to downsize the federal government, in line with a presidential order directing a “critical transformation of the Federal bureaucracy” to maximize efficiency and productivity.During Trump’s first term, Republicans, who were in the minority, shut down the government in October 2018 for a record 35 days. The impasse ended in January 2019, when Trump agreed to a temporary funding measure that withheld billions of dollars sought by the administration for its border wall.







