Overview
- OMB Director Russ Vought announced that reductions in force have begun, with a spokesperson calling the layoffs substantial but offering no totals or agency-wide breakdowns.
- Federal employee unions, including AFGE, filed lawsuits seeking to block the firings, calling the move unlawful and a sharp departure from standard shutdown practice.
- Agency officials said the Education Department and Health and Human Services are among those hit, though the full scope and headcount remain unclear.
- Operational fallout continues as essential TSA officers and air traffic controllers work without pay and flight delays rise, while key BLS and Census economic reports are postponed.
- Talks remain stalled with both chambers out until next week, Republicans pushing a short-term funding bill and Democrats insisting on action to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies.