Federal employees are under growing strain as staffing losses, contract disputes and government shutdown instability ripple across agencies that millions of Americans rely on.
On today’s episode of the America’s Work Force Union Podcast, National Treasury Employees Union President Doreen Greenwald described a federal workforce still reporting for duty despite low morale, legal battles and mounting pressure on the public services that keep the country functioning.
The latest warning from the National Treasury Employees Union is not simply about labor relations inside federal agencies. It is about whether the public institutions Americans depend on can continue to function under sustained pressure.
Appearing on the America’s Work Force Union Podcast, NTEU National President Doreen Greenwald described a federal workforce trying to hold the line amid staffing losses, hiring restrictions, contract disputes and the instability caused by the latest partial government shutdown. She believes the damage is now reaching the public through slower processing, weakened oversight and growing uncertainty in offices that handle taxes, consumer protection, inspections and border operations.
NTEU represents workers across 38 departments and agencies, including revenue officers, attorneys, scientists, food inspectors, cybersecurity specialists, law enforcement personnel and park rangers. Greenwald said the pressure has been broad, with agencies across government facing the same basic pattern: fewer people, more disruption and less certainty about whether the workforce will have the tools needed to do the job.
Buyout offers, deferred resignation programs and hiring freezes have pushed experienced workers out of agencies that were already short-staffed, Greenwald said. The result has not been improved efficiency but deeper disorder, with agencies losing institutional knowledge while backlogs continue to grow, she added.
That pattern matters because federal work is often invisible when it functions well. Tax returns are processed. inspections happen. consumer complaints move through the system. The public may not see the machinery behind those outcomes, but Greenwald said that machinery is now under stress.
She pointed to a workforce that continues to report for duty despite falling morale, driven by its commitment to public service. Many federal employees, she noted, are veterans or long-serving civil servants who entered government work out of a sense of mission rather than for high pay. Now, those workers are being asked to deliver essential services while facing uncertainty over staffing, pay and workplace protections.
Among the clearest examples Greenwald offered was the Internal Revenue Service, where NTEU represents a significant share of the workforce. The IRS has lost roughly 20,000 employees it could not afford to lose, while hiring restrictions have made it harder to replace them, she said.
The IRS is responsible for collecting the revenue that funds the overwhelming majority of federal operations. Greenwald warned that staffing losses have hit both paper processing and more complex enforcement work, making it harder for the agency to keep up with routine filings while also reviewing sophisticated returns that require trained auditors and experienced staff.
She also emphasized the technology problem. Many IRS systems remain outdated, and while automation and artificial intelligence are often promoted as solutions, Greenwald said those tools cannot replace the judgment required to examine complicated tax filings. For ordinary wage earners, withholding handles much of the process. For higher-income or more complex filers, the system relies on trained professionals to review schedules, identify gaps and ensure the law is applied fairly.
That means reduced staffing weakens the confidence in tax fairness. If working people meet their obligations, Greenwald argued, they should be able to trust that everyone else is being held to the same standard.
Greenwald also highlighted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which she described as another weakened federal agency. The bureau provides a key line of defense for consumers, including older Americans, veterans and families vulnerable to financial scams and abusive practices. Efforts to dismantle or diminish the bureau’s work affect employees and reduce the government’s capacity to return money to harmed consumers and to police financial market misconduct, she said.
The same logic applies to food inspection and scientific work. Cuts and instability across agencies mean fewer people available to carry out inspections, evaluate evidence and support the public protections Americans often take for granted, Greenwald said. Whether the issue is food safety, environmental oversight or the integrity of public health and science-based decision-making, she argued that the federal workforce is central to making those systems credible.
While federal workers are often discussed as a budget line item, Greenwald believes the public should see them as the workforce that makes government function.
The interview also focused on the union fight itself. Greenwald said NTEU has been challenging actions aimed at stripping bargaining rights from large segments of the workforce.
She pointed to ongoing litigation over an executive order affecting union coverage, and pushing back against efforts to treat negotiated contracts as if they can be discarded unilaterally. Contracts reached in good faith should remain valid and enforceable, Greenwald said, and the union intends to defend them.
That legal and legislative fight now includes the Protect America’s Workforce Act, which Greenwald said is designed to reverse the executive action at issue and reaffirm federal workers’ right to union representation. She noted that the measure has already drawn bipartisan support in the House and is now part of a broader push to build Senate backing.
Greenwald contends the stakes extend beyond the federal sector because weakening union rights in government will encourage similar attacks elsewhere.
Greenwald reserved some of her strongest criticism for the recurring use of shutdown politics. No federal employee should be expected to work without pay or to depend on food banks, donations or other emergency measures to get by, she said.
Situations in which federal employees tied to critical missions must continue reporting to work while support staff and other personnel stay home, yet face uncertainty or delayed pay, create an imbalance that is both demoralizing and unsustainable, she said.
The broader warning from Greenwald was that federal employees have become convenient targets in a political narrative that ignores what they actually do. Her argument on America’s Work Force was that the public should look past the rhetoric and focus on outcomes. Clean water, safe food, fair tax administration, consumer safeguards, secure parks and functioning border operations all depend on a stable, respected and properly staffed federal workforce.
That is the labor story at the center of this moment. The fight over federal workers is also a fight over whether public service will be treated as a public good worth protecting.
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