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Some fired federal workers are being mocked by their families as DOGE’s policies divide America

The politics of Elon Musk and DOGE have split families across America - leading to more strife for fired federal workers

Andrew Georgeson
in New York
Friday 07 March 2025 15:38 GMT
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Trump says Musk 'will do the cutting' if Cabinet members can't decide who to fire

Amid all the usual pressures of losing a job, 24-year-old former federal worker Luke Tobin has faced another challenge: relatives cheering his firing.

Tobin, who lost his job as a technician with the U.S. Forest Service in Idaho’s Nez Perce National Forest, is one of several thousand federal workers whose role has been cut as part of Elon Musk and DOGE's slash-and-burn approach to reduce what they see as government waste.

As Tobin filled last-minute prescriptions before he lost his health insurance and sent off job applications, he expected some sympathy from his family. What he found, however, was the opposite, with some relatives cheering “what has to happen to make the government great again."

“I’ve been treated as a public enemy by the government and now it’s bleeding into my own family,” he said.

“They can’t separate their ideology and their politics from supporting their own family and their own loved ones."

And he is not alone.

Family members of Kristin Jenn, shows here in her National Park Service ranger uniform in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska, unfollowed her on social media after she lost her job.
Family members of Kristin Jenn, shows here in her National Park Service ranger uniform in Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska, unfollowed her on social media after she lost her job. (AP)

Kristin Jenn got a similar response from members of her family after she learned the National Park Service ranger job she was due to start had been put on hold by the billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency hiring freeze. She thinks it's likely the job will be eliminated altogether.

As she has expressed her disappointment over potentially losing her dream job, some members of her mostly conservative family have unfriended her on social media. Others are giving her the silent treatment. Nearly all favor such cuts even if she's a victim of them.

"My life is disintegrating because I can't work in my chosen field," says Jenn, 47, from Austin, Texas. "Lump on top of that no support from family – it hits you very hard."

The strife has extended to Jenn's mother, a former federal employee herself. When she has criticized the administration's actions, her mother simply says she supports the president.

"She has somehow been convinced that public servants are a parasite and unproductive even though she was a public servant," says Jenn.

The federal job cuts are the work of DOGE, which has been tearing through agencies looking for suspected waste. No official tally of firings has been released, but the list stretches into the thousands and to nearly every part of the country.

More layoffs are expected as DOGE continues its work, although Trump has now shifted the onus onto the cabinet secretaries to make the cuts.

President Donald Trump has told cabinet members that they, not Elon Musk, have the final say over staffing at their respective agencies.
President Donald Trump has told cabinet members that they, not Elon Musk, have the final say over staffing at their respective agencies. (AP)

Eric Anderson, 48, of Chicago, was still absorbing the shock of being fired from his National Parks Service job as a biological science technician when he came across his aunt's social media post celebrating the DOGE cuts. The gist, Anderson said, was, "Man, it sure is great seeing all this waste being knocked off."

He grows angry thinking about it.

"Do you think I'm a waste?" he says, his voice rising as he recalls the post. "There are a lot of people out there that are hurting right now that are not a waste."

Erica Stubbs, who was working as a forestry technician with the U.S. Forest Service in Boulder, Colorado, is avoiding social media after seeing hate for federal workers.

Though most people in her life have been supportive since she was fired, some have made passing comments about the necessity of eliminating jobs like hers.

"What they tell me is it's just cutting out the waste, the excess spending — that your job's not that important," says 27-year-old Stubbs. "I'm not saying it's the most important job in the world but it's my job. It's important to me."

Social media is teeming with posts reveling the layoffs and urging DOGE: "Fire more!" In a fiercely divided country, many saw the cutbacks through their own political lens.

One man's devastation, it turns out, can be another man's delight.

Protests have taken places outside of several government agencies targeted by Elon Musk and DOGE.
Protests have taken places outside of several government agencies targeted by Elon Musk and DOGE. (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Riley Rackliffe, who was working as an aquatic ecologist at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada, was buoyed that his firing led so many friends and relatives to reach out, offering to pass his resume along, call their congressman or even help with his mortgage.

Mixed with that, though, has been the vitriol.

When his firing made the local news, a Facebook posting of the story led to a storm of comments deriding him and championing the layoffs. One person called Riley, who is 36 and holds a Ph.D., a "glorified pool boy" whose job nearly anyone could do.

Even some of Rackliffe's friends paired their expressions of consolation for Rackliffe with support for cutting jobs they contended were unnecessary government bloat.

"Hey, I'm sorry you lost your job but I think we really need to cut out some of this waste in the government," Rackliffe said one friend texted him, saying he supported DOGE's aims. "He basically said, 'We've got to do this. We've got to rip off the Band-Aid."

What stings most, Rackliffe says, is the contention that people like him were lazy and worthless, collecting big paychecks for meaningless work.

"It's really hurtful for the president to insinuate that you don't exist or that your job consisted of sitting at home doing nothing and cashing the paycheck," he says. "I'd like to see him sifting through spiny naiad in 120-degree weather looking for parasitic snails. He's the one that goes golfing on the government dime. I don't even know how to golf."

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Additional reporting by AP.

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