White House Moves on Plans to Slash Federal Funding, Staff, and Office Leases
January 31, 2025
Funding freezes, employee buyouts and scrutiny of the federal office lease portfolio were among the actions taken by the White House and its Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) this week, as the Trump Administration acted on promises to shrink the federal government.
Federal Funding
On Monday, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a memo implementing a "Temporary Pause" on certain federal financial assistance programs. (Politico, Jan. 28)
This directive aimed to stop federal loans and grants “implicated” by seven recent executive orders pertaining to areas such as clean energy, DEI initiatives, transgender rights, and foreign aid.
By Wednesday, OMB issued a 2-sentence memo rescinding the temporary pause, with the goal to moot the lawsuit filed in the interim that resulted in a federal court restraining order placing the spending freeze on ice. (NYT, Jan. 28) (The Hill, Jan. 29)
OMB’s reversal does not lift previous holds on funding of programs disfavored by the administration. Underlying Executive Orders remain in effect regarding the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate treaty, “unleashing” American energy resources with a preference for oil and gas development, and abandoning federal DEI programs.
The administration may also issue future spending freezes. (Politico, Jan. 29) The administration will continue to reshape federal spending policies through executive action, raising significant constitutional issues that could reach the U.S. Supreme Court. (ABA Journal, Jan. 29).
Federal Workforce
The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) announced a buyout program offering federal employees severance equal to eight months' salary if they resign by February 6. (The Hill, Jan. 30)
Employees who stay do not have a guarantee of their job – but must return to full-time, in-office work as per an executive order signed by Trump on inauguration day. (Washington Post, Jan. 23)
DOGE, led by Elon Musk, estimates the push for “deferred resignations” could shrink the federal workforce by 5% to 10%. (AP News, Jan. 28) (Axios, Jan. 28)
Meanwhile, Trump has ousted Democratic appointees of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) before the expiration of their terms. Litigation challenging these firings is highly likely. (Federal News Network, Jan. 28).
Federal Office Leases
DOGE is also reportedly focused on reducing federal government leases in private-sector buildings. Musk has installed “longtime associates” at the General Services Administration (GSA) to reduce the footprint of U.S. owned and leased real estate. (NextGov, Jan. 30)
Musk’s visit yesterday to GSA headquarters could “presage more cost-cutting efforts” to “right-size the Federal real estate portfolio of more than 7,500 leases.” (New York Times, Jan. 30)
A recent Trepp analysis quantifies the impact of GSA-leased space in the Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York City, Washington, DC, and other metro areas where federal tenancy accounts for significant percentages of total office inventory.
Just as federal workers are returning to offices—prompted by a Trump Executive Order signed after his inauguration—the “cumulative damage” of canceling federal leases under a DOGE-led initiative “would be severe.” (GlobeSt, Jan. 20).
Looking Ahead
Ongoing budget reconciliation discussions on Capitol Hill suggest that further government funding cuts remain a possibility as part of broader fiscal policy negotiations. The situation remains fluid, with potential implications for various federal programs.
On Wednesday, House Republicans outlined their budget blueprint, setting fiscal targets and potential cuts as they prepare to draft a reconciliation package next week. (Politico, Jan. 29)
However, Republicans remain divided on strategy for advancing President Trump’s agenda. House Republicans favor a single-bill approach, while Senate Majority Leader John Thune indicates that his conference has developed an initial budget as part of a two-step plan to pass border security measures, tax cuts, and other priorities. (Politico, Jan. 29)
The Roundtable will continue to stay informed about further developments as the administration's policies evolve.