WASHINGTON – As the Trump administration on Friday started its firing of 1,353 staff on the State Department, laid-off staff described shock, a chaotic means of layoffs and concern concerning the ramifications of gutting authorities diplomatic experience.
“They moved us three times in the past week, telling us we were going to be merged into different offices… there’s no transparency, no official communication, no anything, just complete disrespect for people who had been serving this country for many years,” mentioned Andrea Samuelson, who was fired after 16 years on the division.
Another terminated worker, who requested anonymity for concern of retaliation, instructed HuffPost that they had labored in an workplace centered on conserving Americans protected, and the general public needs to be cautious of Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s claims that his adjustments to the State Department will streamline its work.
“People should be feeling scared: they are going to be less safe no matter what this administration says,” the worker mentioned, saying their dismissal “came out of nowhere.”
State Department officers and congressional sources beforehand instructed HuffPost that Rubio’s decision-making about which personnel and workplaces to chop appeared arbitrary and concerned little transparency. Several officers fired on Friday mentioned that they had not anticipated that they or their workplaces can be affected.
Affected State Department staffers spoke with HuffPost throughout a day rally in entrance of the company. Dozens of individuals — together with two Democratic lawmakers, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (Md.) and Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (Va.) ― gathered to applaud, or “clap out” the terminated staff, whose ranks included each profession civil servants and international service officers. As these officers walked out of the looming Harry S. Truman constructing, many have been visibly crying and several other have been carrying plaques; others strode out and joined the group awaiting them, tacitly projecting defiance. The crowd held up indicators with messages like “THANK YOU AMERICA’S DIPLOMATS” and “DIPLOMACY IS HOMELAND SECURITY.”
“To see them treated so shabbily hurts, but it also hurts our country because this diminishes our influence overseas,” Van Hollen instructed HuffPost. “You know the people who are going to be cheering this? They’re our adversaries — they’re going to be celebrating. Our allies and friends? They’ll be worried. So Donald Trump likes to say he’s about America first. What we’re witnessing here is America in retreat. When we disengage from the world, we lose.”
Akbar Shahid Ahmed/HuffPost
Last month, a senior State Department official defended the overhaul in an e-mail to HuffPost.
“Secretary Rubio, under President Trump’s leadership, is working to consolidate and strengthen the State Department workforce. Leadership from the Department has been to dozens of congressional briefings and hearings regarding the reorganization. The proposed reorganization follows all Congressional requirements. Consultation with Congress will continue to ensure a State Department that best reflects America’s core national interests,” the official wrote.
Samuelson argued, “To call it a process would be a joke.”
One laid-off official mentioned the method was “very confusing,” stopping affected staff from guaranteeing that essential information and experience can be shared with colleagues who stay.
“I was implementing legislation that passed under the first Trump administration and seemingly had Secretary Rubio’s support, so there was reason to believe that would live on,” added the official, who additionally spoke on situation of anonymity, calling their position “a dream job.”
“The bureaucracy can appear opaque. On the inside, it’s just a lot of people working together,” the official mentioned.
Akbar Shahid Ahmed/HuffPost
HuffPost witnessed hugs amongst staffers, individuals providing to assist one another discover jobs and chants by others unaffected instantly by the firing. Former officers on the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) — which the Trump administration shuttered on July 1 — and former appointees on the State Department underneath President Joe Biden have been among the many crowd of supporters.
Tom Rhodes, a former USAID worker, carried an indication saying “DESTROY ≠ REFORM”. He mentioned he had been posted to Peru engaged on “protecting American and Western interests against Chinese aggression and environmental crime… all of that work is impossible now.”
Akbar Shahid Ahmed/HuffPost
A international service officer who retired after 34 years, Bob Gilchrist, described the second as “a tragic day for our country” as the federal government misplaced “dedicated public servants who’ve worked for both Republican and Democratic administrations.”
Speakers on the rally led chants to “fight back” and instructed former State Department staff they need to communicate up since they have been not topic to authorities restrictions.
Attendees handed out small flyers bearing a agency message, printed underneath an American flag: “Here worked America’s experts on democracy, human rights (yes, which include women’s, LGBTQ+ & minorities’ rights), elections security, freedom of expression, privacy, on countering corruption, violent extremism and disinformation, and more,” it learn. “You’ve simply launched them and a whole lot of their colleagues into the wild… within the United States of America.
Akbar Shahid Ahmed/HuffPost
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-state-department-firing_n_6871a4d0e4b07a168b4798b6