By Raphael Satter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Donald Trump has ordered federal workers to return to the office five days a week, signing an executive order in front of cheering supporters at Washington’s Capital One (NYSE:COF) Arena on Monday.
The move would force large numbers of white collar government employees to forfeit remote working arrangements, reversing a trend that took off in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Some of Trump’s allies have said the return-to-work mandate is intended to help gut the civil service, making it easier for Trump to replace long-serving government workers with loyalists.
In a brief statement posted to the White House’s website, Trump ordered all heads of departments and agencies to, “as soon as practicable, take all necessary steps to terminate remote work arrangements and require employees to return to work in-person at their respective duty stations on a full-time basis, provided that the department and agency heads shall make exemptions they deem necessary.”
The return-to-office order is being paired with a hiring freeze and the creation of an advisory body – dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) – which is meant to help Trump take huge chunks out of the federal government and eliminate some agencies wholesale.
Experts say the aggregate effect of the changes will be to drive frustrated government employees out of their jobs, a goal the Trump team is explicitly gunning for.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk – who chairs DOGE – recently predicted that revoking “the COVID-era privilege” of telework would trigger “a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome.”
Not all government workers would be covered. A quarter of the federal workforce are unionized and many are covered by bargaining agreements that allow for remote work or hybrid arrangements.
However, Russell Vought, Trump’s nominee for Office of Management and Budget (OMB), has hinted at efforts to unwind those deals, telling lawmakers that the agreements struck during the Joe Biden administration were “a concerning phenomenon, and one that we are looking at very closely.”
While Trump and other Republicans have suggested that remote work is rampant among federal employees, government data shows that it is more limited. About 46% of federal workers, or 1.1 million people, are eligible for remote work, and about 228,000 of them are fully remote, according to a report issued by the White House Office of Management and Budget in August.