The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is offering employees generous resignation packages as President Donald J. Trump’s administration seeks to downsize the federal government. The CIA has introduced a buyout program of “deferred resignation,” enabling employees to resign while continuing to receive pay through September of this year.
This initiative is part of broader efforts to reduce the federal bureaucracy, overseen by tech billionaire Elon Musk. Initially, national security-related agencies were partially excluded from the governmentwide offer, but CIA Director John Ratcliffe advocated for a tailored version for his agency’s personnel.
The CIA’s approach allows the agency to control the timing of accepted resignations, ensuring critical positions are not vacated simultaneously. The offer’s structure resembles the general program implemented across the federal government. Employees received an email on Tuesday outlining the chance to leave by September 30 but still receive pay for the intervening period. So far, the scheme has reduced the federal bureaucracy by around 20,000.
The effort aims to encourage long-serving CIA officers, especially those hired in the aftermath of 9/11, to consider early retirement. Ratcliffe hopes to phase out underperformers while creating advancement opportunities for promising mid-level officers currently blocked by longer-serving personnel.
President Trump first offered to buy out federal career employees after signing an executive order ending COVID-19-era work-from-home policies. Employees have until this Thursday to accept the offer, allowing them to work from home until the fall if they resign.