Email warning of impending layoff leaves more than a thousand CDC employees worried about their jobs before Trump administration admits error

 October 14, 2025

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is working to secure the positions of 1,000 employees laid off in error in emails sent Friday, the UK Daily Mail reported. The erroneous emails attributed the firings to President Donald Trump's cuts during the ongoing shutdown of the federal government.

President Donald Trump promised that a government shutdown would give him the opportunity to scale back the size of government permanently. What wasn't expected was the largest single layoff event in the agency's history, which was later deemed an error.

Some of those who received notices that they would be losing their jobs included top scientists and disease experts, some of whom were currently working on outbreaks of Ebola and measles. The emails also effectively cut through entire sectors of the agency, including the Global Health Center, which leads in immunizations, and the Epidemic Intelligence Services, which are known as the "disease detectives" that track and anticipate outbreaks.

The mix-up became apparent quickly, and by Saturday, health officials were rolling back their "erroneous" dismissal notices. Nevertheless, the CDC is left to sort out the mishap and track down affected personnel to set the record straight.

Inciting incident

The Trump administration sent warnings to at least 4,200 federal employees on Friday from at least seven different agencies, indicating that pink slips were forthcoming, The Hill reported. Of those, approximately 1,100 to 1,200 were from the Department of Health and Human Services.

The notices were sent via email just before 9 p.m. as the Columbus Day weekend began. Even before this happened, the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2883, representing employees at the CDC's Atlanta, Georgia, headquarters, had charged that firings during the government shutdown were punitive.

This sentiment was echoed by Debra Houry, who served as chief medical officer at the CDC before resigning in August over the so-called "politicization of science" that Trump was engaging in. "Some of the best-trained epidemiologists in the world were told they no longer had a job," she complained about the same agency that got so much wrong during the pandemic.

The layoff notices were issued to a pair about to deploy to the Democratic Republic of Congo to respond to an Ebola outbreak. At the same time, another was an official with nearly 30 years of experience who had been working on outbreaks of Marburg virus, mpox, and Ebola in Africa. The Global Health Center's director and half-dozen regional global offices were also "wiped out" before the correction was made to the cuts.

The Trump administration was quick to correct the record, but that hasn't stopped detractors from slamming the very idea of making personnel cuts. Meanwhile, they're blaming Trump for retaliatory action against the agencies rather than sticking to the facts.

Panic and politics

The work that the CDC does is certainly worthwhile, but the amount of caterwauling about the firings is overkill. Like any government agency, even those on the frontline of disease prevention can afford to trim the fat. However, those who were impacted act like every individual on the payroll is equally vital. "This Administration continues to destroy critical pillars of America’s already wounded public health system," Richard Besser, who was previously acting director of the CDC, claimed.

"Using a government shutdown as a pretense to fire hundreds of critically important health officials and thousands of additional government staffers is the height of cruelty and recklessness. The damage this will do to our nation is incalculable," Besser added.

Meanwhile, the Infectious Disease Society of America and other infection control organizations complained that any cuts "will cripple the agency that keeps our country safe by monitoring and preventing disease and saving lives in every community across the country,” a joint statement said. "Uncertainty around which staff have been fired or rehired leaves health professionals and the public in a state of complete confusion about which longstanding public health services they can rely upon," it added.

Still, Dr. Robert Malone, an outspoken critic of the CDC's pandemic response, recognized the bureaucracy likely needed the cuts regardless of how it ended up. "CDC has had decades of mission creep, and has lost focus in core mission. It is now being restructured, redirected, and dismantled," Malone posted to X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday.

These government organizations need a shakeup every now and then, even if it unsettles some of the employees who believe they are essential. The administration corrected its error, but it's a good thing for these lifelong government employees to be on notice that their jobs could always be in jeopardy.

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