Trump’s “Buyout” Purge Comes for the CIA
Donald Trump’s purge of the federal government has found a troubling new target.
Trump’s “buyout” offer (aka the “agree with me or leave” special) has hit the CIA.
The Central Intelligence Agency on Tuesday became the first of the intelligence community to receive Trump’s exit offer of eight months of pay and benefits. The agency is also now enforcing a hiring freeze, and anyone who was hired or in the process of getting hired at the CIA will likely have their offers pulled—especially if their background doesn’t align with the Trump administration’s goals, an aide told The Wall Street Journal.
Those goals are more aggressive surveillance and more anti-China activity, the aide said. Trump’s CIA plans to spy on allied governments like Mexico and take a more hardline approach to drug cartels, classifying them as terrorist organizations. This buyout is yet another step in Trump’s efforts to reshape the federal bureaucracy in his image and fill it to the brim with loyalists who will carry out his goals no questions asked.
The buyout itself is also highly questionable, as Trump does not have the line-by-line authority to authorize funds for such a thing.
“There’s no statutory authority that I can see for the president making this offer,” Senator Tim Kaine told The Wall Street Journal. “The administration immediately knows, you don’t want to work for me. They’ll find some other way to get rid of you. You should not raise your hand.”
Some federal workers in other agencies have resisted the buyouts thus far. How the CIA will respond remains to be seen.