Agencies cut the most by Trump, new data reveals

I believe we are experiencing delays in assistance to citizens due to a lack of employees in the government agencies. The layoffs were only a small amount of the people who have left the Federal Government. Most of the departures were voluntary. Think about it. Two people who have to much influence and power are deciding what your job (if a government employee) requires, The only issue being they have no experience doing your function.

Time will tell the impact.

In total, about 335,000 federal workers left government from January to November 2025, with a vast majority of those people quitting or retiring, according to data released Thursday by the federal government’s human resources arm. While Trump officials and billionaire Elon Musk had vowed to fire many federal employees (accusing the workforce of being bloated and inefficient) only a small fraction of workers, approximately 11,000, were actually laid off.

The Office of Personnel Management’s latest data, which breaks down workforce numbers by agency and other demographics, reveals the extent of the biggest overhaul to the federal workforce since the 1990s. For the first time, the data also shows in detail the extent to which the administration slashed agencies that didn’t conform to President Donald Trump’s policy priorities.

“The Federal Workforce Data website delivers timely, transparent data in a format that is easy to use and built for the future,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said in a statement. “This is a major step forward for accountability and data-driven decision-making across government.”

Those retirements and buyouts touched nearly every kind of job within government, including nurses at Veterans Affairs hospitals, park rangers and Internal Revenue Service agents.

Many federal workers described feeling beaten down and exhausted by the Trump administration, which encouraged people across the board to leave, said Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit that advocates to improve federal agencies and services. Stier said the database reflects the aftermath of an assault that left no agency untouched.

“This is very much a snapshot of our government post-hurricane,” Stier said. “If you come back to a community after a hurricane has come through, the damage is large and idiosyncratic.”

In total, just eight subagencies saw an increase in staffing while the rest of the government was cut. Some of those subagencies, such as the Interior Secretary’s office, increased only because offices were consolidated.

Here are the agencies that were cut the most by Trump, new data shows