A stunning offer just dropped on nearly 2 million federal workers: quit now, get full pay and benefits through September. Some call it a lifeline. Others call it a purge. The Trump White House swears it’s about savings and efficiency.
The “deferred resignation program” lands like a test of loyalty disguised as a choice. On paper, it’s generous: full pay and benefits for months in exchange for walking away quietly by February 6. But behind the numbers is a deeper question: who feels safe enough to stay, and who feels cornered into leaving?
With only a sliver of D.C. employees reportedly returning to offices, the administration is framing this as a reset of a bloated, remote-heavy bureaucracy.
For supporters, it’s long-overdue disruption, a chance to trim costs and force modernization. For critics, it’s a velvet-gloved axe, targeting experienced civil servants whose independence has always been a check on political power. What happens next will echo far beyond agency walls, determining whether this moment becomes a model of reform—or a warning about how easily a government can be reshaped from the ins…