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Trump signs memo to extend federal hiring freeze through July: White House

IANS April 18, 2025 251 views

President Trump has extended the federal hiring freeze through July 15, continuing his strategy to streamline government operations. The memo prohibits filling vacant positions and creating new roles, with exceptions for critical national security and public safety jobs. This action aligns with Trump's campaign promise to "drain the swamp" and reduce bureaucratic spending. The freeze is part of a broader initiative to prioritize private sector job growth and minimize government workforce expansion.

"The President will usher in a Golden Age for America by reforming and improving the government bureaucracy" - Trump Administration"
Trump signs memo to extend federal hiring freeze through July: White House
Washington, April 18: US President Donald Trump has signed a memorandum extending the federal hiring freeze through July 15, White House principal deputy press secretary Harrison Fields wrote in a post on social media platform X.

Key Points

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Trump continues aggressive federal workforce reduction strategy

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Hiring freeze allows exceptions for essential services

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Mirrors initial 2017 executive order approach

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Targeting DEI and non-essential government positions

The move is part of President Trump and Elon Musk's aggressive efforts to cut spending within the federal government, CNN reported.

The original action dictated that no new federal civilian positions could be created and no vacant positions could be filled.

It specifies that it does not prohibit hirings to "maintain essential services, and protect national security, homeland security, and public safety".

A fact sheet put out by the White House called the move "a critical step in shrinking the federal government and ensuring taxpayer dollars are used efficiently".

"The American people elected President Trump to drain the swamp and end ineffective government programs that empower government without achieving measurable results," it said.

The hiring freeze stops federal agencies from filling vacant positions or creating any new ones. The only exceptions are for immigration enforcement, national security or public safety positions.

The freeze is now through July 15, and once that is up, agencies will still only be able to hire one employee for every four that leave.

Trump first implemented the hiring freeze through executive order on his first day in office, and it was set to expire on Sunday.

"The President will usher in a Golden Age for America by reforming and improving the government bureaucracy to work for the American people," the administration said in January.

"He will freeze bureaucrat hiring except in essential areas to end the onslaught of useless and overpaid Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) activists buried into the federal workforce."

The hiring freeze mirrors an initiative Trump took at the beginning of his first term.

A memorandum he signed in January 2017 put a freeze on federal government hiring except for military and other positions that were deemed necessary.

Since January, several federal agencies have been turned upside down with mass firings, while others have been liquidated altogether by the work of Elon Musk, whom Trump made the head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

The Department of Education has been reduced by nearly 50 per cent, and the Health and Human Services Department by around 24 per cent.

Other agencies that have faced 10 per cent reductions or up include the National Science Foundation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Internal Revenue Service and Energy Department, among others.

"In the last two years of the Biden Administration, government was directly responsible for the creation of more than 1 in every 4 jobs," the White House fact sheet said.

"President Trump is committed to reversing this trend by prioritising private-sector job growth and reducing the federal workforce to focus on essential functions."

Trump began his new term by ordering federal employees to go back to work in person, after years of work-from-home policies left much of the government's Washington office buildings vacant, or risk being fired.

"We don't want them to work from home because as everyone knows most of the time they're not working, they're not very productive and it's unfair to the millions of people in the US who are in fact working hard from job sites and not from their home," Trump said in January.

The Supreme Court last week blocked a lower court order for the Trump administration to reinstate thousands of federal workers who lost their jobs in mass firings.

The justices made the ruling in the administration's emergency appeal of a ruling by a California judge that ordered 16,000 probationary employees at six different federal agencies to be reinstated while a lawsuit runs its course.

Reader Comments

M
Mark T.
Finally some fiscal responsibility in Washington! The federal bureaucracy has been bloated for decades. This is exactly why I voted for Trump. 🇺🇸
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Sarah L.
I work at HHS and this is creating chaos. Essential programs are suffering because we can't replace specialists who leave. There's got to be a better way to streamline without gutting expertise.
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James P.
Elon Musk running government efficiency? That's actually brilliant. Say what you will about him, but nobody cuts waste like he does. Tesla's lean operations prove that.
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Aisha K.
I'm concerned about how this affects services. My mom relies on Medicare and wait times have already increased. Not every government job is wasteful bureaucracy...
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Tom R.
The work from home reversal makes sense. My neighbor was a federal employee who literally worked maybe 2 hours a day from home. Taxpayers deserve better.
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Diane W.
While I support reducing waste, the 1:4 replacement ratio seems extreme. There should be agency-by-agency evaluation rather than blanket cuts. Some departments are already understaffed.

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