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Some US agencies tell workers not to reply to Musk's email

Internal Revenue Service workers leave their office after being laid off in downtown Denver, Colorado on 20 February
Internal Revenue Service workers leave their office after being laid off in downtown Denver, Colorado on 20 February

Multiple US federal agencies have told employees not to respond immediately to a demand by President Donald Trump's adviser Elon Musk to list their accomplishments in the last week or be fired, as a chaotic campaign to cull the bureaucracy pushes forward.

Trump administration-appointed officials at the FBI and State Department sent their staff emails telling them not to respond outside their chains of command, in a possible sign of tension between allies of the Republican president and the world's richest person in his campaign to cut down the government's 2.3 million member civilian workforce.

"The FBI, through the office of the director, is in charge of all our review processes," said FBI Director Kash Patel, a Trump appointee, in an email to staff seen by Reuters.

Mr Musk leads the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, which in the first weeks of Mr Trump's administration has laid off more than 20,000 workers and offered buyouts to another 75,000, across wide swaths of the government from the Defence Department - long a top Republican priority - to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, where all staff have been ordered to halt work.

The frantic pace has led the federal government in some cases to rush to rehire workers who perform critical functions like securing the nation's nuclear arsenal and trying to fight the worsening bird flu outbreak, which has caused egg prices to spike higher.

While there is bipartisan agreement that the US government, which carries $36 trillion in debt, would benefit from reform, Mr Musk's tumultuous approach has drawn widespread criticism, including from voters in some Republican areas.

Demonstrators gather for a protest against Elon Musk

Federal workers received an email yesterday evening instructing them to detail the work they did during the previous week by 11.59pm local time tomorrow (5am on Tuesday Irish time), shortly after Mr Musk posted on his X social media site that failing to respond would be taken as a resignation.

The subject of the email read, "What did you do last week?" and came from a human resources address in the Office of Personnel Management, but did not include Mr Musk's threat of termination.

Workers at the departments of Homeland Security, Education and Commerce, as well as at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National Institutes of Health and the Internal Revenue Service also received guidance urging them not to respond, according to sources and emails reviewed by Reuters.


Read more: Nearly 10,000 fired as Trump and Musk step up cuts


"To be clear - this is irregular, unexpected, and warrants further validation," a senior executive at the National Centers for Environmental Information, an agency that manages environmental data and is part of the Commerce Department, wrote.

He instructed employees to hold off on replying for now, adding that the agency would "ascertain the legitimacy and protocol for a response on Monday and provide further guidance".

Union questions Musk's authority

The largest federal workers' union, the American Federation of Government Employees, wrote on X that it did not believe Mr Musk had the authority to fire employees who did not respond and would formally request that OPM rescind the message.

Meanwhile, the union advised members to ask their supervisors directly whether to reply and to follow their guidance.

The email left some employees even more frustrated and worried after weeks of uncertainty about their futures.

"I really wonder when someone is going to say enough," one IRS employee said.

Media offices at the Commerce, Justice, Education and Treasury departments, as well as at the FDIC and NIH, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. An FBI spokesperson declined to comment, and a State Department spokesperson referred questions to the White House.

Mr Musk on X called the email "a very basic pulse check".

Elon Musk has led the effort to fire swathes of the government workforce

Federal judiciary employees also received the email yesterday from OPM, even though the court system is not part of the executive branch, people familiar with the matter said. The Administrative Office of the US Courts, the judiciary's administrative arm, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The judiciary later advised employees in an email that no action should be taken in response to the message, according to an email reviewed by Reuters.

Some officials welcomed the move. Ed Martin, Mr Trump's nominee for US Attorney in Washington, DC, who is serving in an interim capacity, praised My Musk and DOGE in an email response.

But other offices within the Justice Department, including the executive office that supports all US attorneys and the department's civil division, told employees not to reply pending additional information.

In some cases, employees were left unsure how to respond even if they chose to do so.

Some lawyers, for instance, expressed concern that their work is confidential. Workers at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau also received the email, according to people with knowledge of the matter, even though they were all ordered to cease working since early this month, leaving them with little to do.

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a Republican, said the email was "a complete overstep" that would be defeated in court.

"From a management perspective, you can see what a clown car this is right now," Mr Christie said during ABC News' "The Week".