Monday, September 22, 2025

Arizona Democrat moves to codify ‘click to cancel’ rule into law – US politics live

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

State department plans mass layoffs with cuts to nearly 1,800 staff

Andrew Roth

Andrew Roth

The US state department has announced that it plans to move forward with mass layoffs as part of the most significant restructuring of the country’s diplomatic corps in decades. Officials say the cuts will align their mission with Donald Trump’s vision of America first.

The layoffs, which are commonly called reductions in force (or RIFs), along with voluntary redundancies, will affect nearly 15% of the state department’s domestic staff. A senior state department official said that was close to 1,800 people. The restructuring will also see several hundred bureaus merged or eliminated entirely. The department advises the president and leads the US in foreign policy issues.

The state department went forward with the layoffs, which were long expected, after the supreme court sided this week with the Trump administration against a federal judge’s hold on plans for mass government firings that could affect hundreds of thousands of federal employees.

“In the coming days, the department will be communicating to individuals affected by the reduction in force. First and foremost, we want to thank them for their dedication and service to the United States,” read a memo attributed to Michael Rigas, the deputy secretary for management and resources, announcing the layoffs.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Federal officers use force on protesters during immigration raids at California farms

Federal immigration officers, supported by National Guard troops, used force against protesters, firing chemical munitions, during raids on two cannabis farms in California’s Central Coast area on Thursday, according to local news outlets and video posted on Instagram by immigrant-rights activists.

As a TV news helicopter hovered overhead, federal agents fired chemical agents at protesters during an immigration raid in Camarillo, California on Thursday.

At a farm in Carpinteria, Salud Carbajal, a Democratic congressman, was denied entry to the area by federal agents, a scene captured on video by the Santa Barbara Independent.

Congressman Salud Carbajal was denied access during a Homeland Security operation in Carpinteria. A very large crowd gathered at Foothill and Casitas Pass Road for about two hours. 10 people were reportedly taken away from a nearby cannabis farm. pic.twitter.com/wOFiQT7ZIc

— John Palminteri (@JohnPalminteri) July 10, 2025

“ICE was conducting a raid using disproportionate displays of force against local farm workers and our agricultural community” Carbajal said in a statement after the incident. “As a member of Congress and representative of the Central Coast, I have the right to conduct oversight and see first-hand what ICE was doing here. As soon as I walked up, I was denied entry and was not allowed to pass. This was completely unacceptable”, he said.

“And let me be clear” Carbajal added, “these militarized ICE raids are not how you keep our communities safe. This kind of chaos only traumatizes families and tears communities apart. They are also a gross misuse of limited resources and a betrayal of the values that define us as Americans.”

Two members of the Carpinteria city council, Julia Mayer and Mónica Solórzano, were also present, they told the Santa Barbara Independent. As the officers pushed the crowd back, they threw a smoke grenade, causing Solórzano to fall and injure her right arm, she said.

“They were pushing toward each of us and we were standing,” Solórzano said. “They pushed us as a group into the ground.”

“It was loud,” Mayer said. “We were just trying to be out here to support our communities.”

Activists with 805 Immigrant Coalition sent out text alerts calling on community members to protect the workers and confronted the officers. The face-off with the federal officers was documented on Instagram by another group, VC Defensa, which describes itself as “a coalition of local organizations dedicated to protecting the immigrant and refugee population of Ventura County.”

Carpinteria’s city council scheduled an emergency meeting to discuss the city’s response to the raids at 6pm local time on Thursday.

Share

Updated at 


source

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

Never miss any important news. Subscribe to our newsletter.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Never miss any important news. Subscribe to our newsletter.

Recent News

Editor's Pick