Nearly 100 USAID staff put on leave amid agency restructuring
3/2/2025 5:57
The Trump administration
over the weekend put on administrative leave dozens more staff
at U.S. Agency for International Development, three sources
familiar with the move said, as it moves to abolish the agency's
independence and bring it under the control of the State
Department.
Nearly 30 career staff in the agency's Legislative and
Public Affairs bureau lost access overnight to their emails, the
sources said, bringing the total number of senior USAID career
staff who have been put on leave over the past week close to
100.
Two senior officials overseeing the agency's security
operations were also put on administrative leave after refusing
to hand over classified documents to Elon Musk's Department of
Government Efficiency (DOGE) officials, one of the sources said.
Matt Hopson, who was appointed as chief of staff by the
Trump administration, has resigned, five sources familiar with
the matter said. A congressional source said his resignation
followed the security personnel being put on leave. USAID did
not respond to a request about Hopson.
The purge follows more than a week of mayhem inside USAID,
Washington's primary agency funding billions of dollars' worth
of life-saving aid globally. President Donald Trump ordered a
freeze on almost all U.S. foreign aid, saying his administration
will review spending to ensure money is distributed in line with
his "America First" foreign policy.
The global freeze on most of U.S. foreign aid is already
sending shockwaves around the world. Field hospitals in Thai
refugee camps, landmine clearance in war zones, and drugs to
treat millions suffering from diseases such as HIV are among the
programs at risk of elimination.
U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Brian Mast on
Sunday said that he supported moving USAID under the State
Department and that there needs to be "more command and
control".
Asked on CBS' "Face the Nation" if congressional approval
was needed or whether Trump could act unilaterally, Mast did not
answer but said restructuring was needed.
The "purging of people throughout the State Department,
other agencies" and freezing aid were "all very important and
necessary steps to make sure that we secure America," he said.
Representatives for the State Department and USAID did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Meanwhile, billionaire Trump ally Musk on Sunday continued
to slam the State Department and USAID in his posts and reposts
on X. Trump has tasked Musk with leading a federal cost-cutting
panel with broad oversight powers. Officials from DOGE have made
frequent visits to USAID headquarters in Washington.
On Sunday, Musk accused USAID of being "a criminal
organization" without providing any evidence and added "Time for
it to die".
Peter Marocco was appointed as head of the Office of Foreign
Assistance at the State Department and is leading the agency's
sweeping changes, according to three sources familiar with the
matter. Marocco previously served in Trump's first
administration in the Department of Defense. The State
Department did not respond to questions about Marocco.
USAID's website has been down since Saturday afternoon, a
sign that the end is near for the agency, whose funding goes to
programs on everything from women's health in conflict zones to
access to clean water, HIV/AIDS treatments, energy security and
anti-corruption work.
Reuters reported on Friday that the National Security
Council hosted discussions this week on the topic and that the
White House was exploring legal authorities that Trump could use
to issue an executive order to end USAID's independence.
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