USAID places global staff on leave as part of Trump’s purge
WASHINGTON: The US government´s giant humanitarian agency USAID on Wednesday announced it was placing its staff in the United States and around the world on administrative leave as it moved to recall employees from overseas postings.
The agency said in a statement on its website -- which reappeared late on Tuesday after going dark over the weekend -- that the staff leave will begin shortly before midnight on February 7.
The administrative leave will hit “all USAID direct hire personnel... with the exception of designated personnel responsible for mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programmes.”
“Thank you for your service,” the statement read.
The move is part of Trump´s -- and his billionaire ally Elon Musk´s -- radical drive to shrink the US government, which has shocked Washington and caused angry protests from Democrats and the human rights community.
The aid arm of US foreign policy, USAID funds health and emergency programmes in around 120 countries, including the world´s poorest regions.
It is seen as a vital source of soft power for the United States in its struggle for influence with rivals including China, where Musk has extensive business interests. Musk has called USAID “a viper´s nest of radical-left marxists who hate America” and has vowed to shut it down.
Among other criticisms, which Musk has not substantiated, he claims USAID does “rogue CIA work” and even “funded bioweapon research, including Covid-19, that killed millions of people.”
The SpaceX and Tesla CEO -- who has massive contracts with the US government and was the biggest financial backer of Trump´s campaign -- said he had personally cleared the unprecedented move with the president.
The assault on USAID comes in the context of long-running narratives on the hard-line conservative and libertarian wings of the Republican Party that the United States wastes money on foreigners while ignoring Americans.
The agency describes itself as working “to end extreme poverty and promote resilient, democratic societies while advancing our security and prosperity.”
As of 2023, the most recent year for which full data was available, the top three recipients of aid from USAID were Ukraine, Ethiopia and Jordan, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Other top recipients of aid included the Democratic Republic of Congo, Afghanistan, South Sudan, and Syria.
The scale of USAID´s funding for Ukraine is significant, with the war-torn European country receiving more than $16 billion in macroeconomic support, according to US government data.
Founded in 1961, the agency´s budget of more than $40 billion is a small drop in the US government´s overall annual spending of nearly $7 trillion.
The United States is the world´s largest provider of official development assistance, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
-
US To Exit WHO: A Seismic Shift In Global Health? -
Palace Staff Reveals Nothing Has Changed For ‘disgraced’ Andrew After Losing Titles -
How Did Taylor Swift Cope With ‘exhausting’ Sickness During Popular ‘Eras Tour’ -
Artists Launch ‘Stealing Isn’t Innovation’ Campaign Against AI Use -
Elon Musk’s XAI Grok Imagine Now Generates 10-second Videos With Sharper Quality: Here’s How -
Gaten Matarazzo Reveals Having A Gripe About Unfair Treatment On 'Stranger Things' -
Jeff Bezos Vs Elon Musk: Blue Origin Enters Satellite Race To Rival Starlink -
Charlie Puth Explains Why He Went Against His Own Words About 'Hero' -
Popular Weight-loss Drugs Could Help Treat Addiction -
Brooklyn Beckham In ‘terrible Spot’ Like Prince Harry After Airing Family Drama -
A$AP Rocky Reveals Real Reason Behind Feud With Drake -
Stroke During Pregnancy Linked To Long-term Heart Problems -
Trump Backs Off European Tariffs Threat After Reaching ‘framework Of A Future Deal’ On Greenland With NATO -
South Korea Passes World’s First Comprehensive AI Law, Reshaping Global Regulation -
‘Disgraced’ Andrew’s New Demands Exposed As He Moves Out Of Royal Lodge -
Court Allows TikTok To Operate In Canada Pending Review