The Trump administration has lowered its estimate of federal worker layoffs linked to the ongoing U.S. government shutdown. According to a U.S. Department of Justice filing on Tuesday, 4,108 federal employees have been dismissed since October 1, the day the shutdown began. This figure is a revision from last week’s estimate of 4,278 layoffs, signaling that initial claims of large-scale job cuts were overstated.
While the administration has attributed the dismissals to the shutdown, critics argue that the move marks an unprecedented use of a funding lapse to justify permanent job cuts. Historically, federal shutdowns—15 since 1981—have resulted in temporary furloughs, not mass firings. The U.S. government currently employs about 2 million civilian workers, meaning these layoffs represent only a small fraction of the total workforce.
President Donald Trump has sought to pressure Democrats into backing his spending plan by linking the shutdown to job losses and program cuts. His approach has sparked outrage among lawmakers and federal unions. Employee unions have filed lawsuits, arguing that conducting layoffs during a shutdown violates federal law, which limits agency activity to essential services such as national security and public safety.
The layoffs are expected to disrupt crucial government operations, including disease outbreak investigations and educational support programs. Lawmakers from Maryland and Virginia—states with a large concentration of federal workers—condemned the cuts at a rally near the White House. “We will not be defined by small people who have not a drop of empathy in their soul,” said Representative Don Beyer, a Virginia Democrat.
A federal judge is scheduled to hear the unions’ case on October 15, as the shutdown continues to strain public services and thousands of American families.


Medicare to Cover GLP-1 Weight-Loss and Diabetes Drugs Starting July 1
UN Experts Condemn Trump’s Cuba Fuel Blockade Amid Deepening Energy Crisis
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum Reconsiders Early School Closure Plan Ahead of 2026 World Cup
Australia’s Wealthy Donors Shift Support to One Nation Amid Conservative Party Decline
Panama Defends Port Takeover Amid U.S.-China Tensions and Canal Dispute
Judge Dismisses Elon Musk’s Fraud Claims Against OpenAI, Trial to Proceed on Remaining Allegations
Brazil Pension Fund Crackdown After Banco Master Collapse Raises Investment Concerns
Judge Orders Release of Family After Longest ICE Detention Under Trump Administration
Ukraine-Russia Ceasefire Confirmed as Prisoner Swap Deal Advances
Iran Accuses U.S. of Violating Strait of Hormuz Ceasefire with Ship and Coastal Attacks
U.S., South Korea Launch Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative
U.S. Fast-Tracks $8.6 Billion Arms Sales to Middle East Allies Amid Rising Tensions
Trump-Xi Beijing Summit to Focus on Trade, Taiwan, and Boeing Deal
Russian LNG Shadow Fleet Expands Amid Arctic LNG 2 Sanctions
Judge Rules DOGE Humanities Grant Cuts Unconstitutional
RFK Jr. Expands CDC Vaccine Advisory Panel's Scope Amid Legal Battles 



