US They dedicated years to USAID. They had minutes to pack up their desks. - Dismantled signs. Blacked-out windows. Officers guarding the elevators. This week, staff visited their offices for a final, tearful goodbye after the Trump administration broke up the agency.

They dedicated years to USAID. They had minutes to pack up their desks.​

Dismantled signs. Blacked-out windows. Officers guarding the elevators. This week, staff visited their offices for a final, tearful goodbye after the Trump administration broke up the agency.

February 28, 2025 at 4:28 p.m. EST

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Prairie Summer, a USAID contractor for almost 10 years, cries as she embraces a colleague after leaving the agency’s former offices at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center on Thursday in Washington. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

Prairie Summer walked into the building and under the doorway where her agency’s sign used to hang, past the picture frames — now empty — and windows that had been blacked out. Officers with guns stood guard.

She joined the line of other USAID workers waiting to pass through security so they could retrieve their belongings and wave a final goodbye to their headquarters, each other and the agency that had become ground zero for President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk’s overhaul of the federal government.

Just two days before, she and others had received a text summoning them to retrieve their belongings from the Ronald Reagan Building in downtown Washington. They’d been locked out as Trump’s rapid-fire dismantling of the congressionally authorized agency in the name of government efficiency moved into its final stages.

“Staff MUST bring their own boxes, bags, tape, and/or other containers to remove their personal items,” the message read. They would have 15 minutes to pack.

“This is really it,” Summer, 45, thought as she slipped off her sneakers and walked through the metal detectors.

She had helped clear land mines in Nepal and supported youth programs in Lebanon and, for the past nine years, she’d worked at USAID, the principal U.S. agency tasked with assisting countries around the globe as they recover from disaster, try to escape poverty and engage in democratic reforms. Earlier this month, Musk, in a post on X called the agency a “viper’s nest of radical-left marxists who hate America.”

For one last time, she walked by the Memorial Wall, which honors 99 colleagues who gave their lives while serving the nation.

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Well-wishers gathered with signs and snacks to “clap out” USAID employees as they cleaned out their desks. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

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USAID staff lug their personal items from the agency's shuttered headquarters. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

She was a senior director, responsible for managing the agency’s partnerships with the private sector across the globe. She was ready to get to work under the Trump administration to expand USAID’s efforts abroad that, ultimately, she said, helped keep Americans safe, too.

Then she was terminated.

Outside the stone building, the sidewalk thronged with supporters. One woman waved a sign declaring: “Make American Compassionate Again.”

Asked what brought him out, a man who said he was retired military but declined to give his name said: “People always thank me for my service. I wanted to be sure to thank them.”

Another, bundled in a rain coat, shook her homemade maracas — a soda can filled with pennies.

“I thought my hands might get tired from clapping,” she said, weeping.

Cheers and honks from passing traffic broke through the February gloom Thursday and, again, on Friday, when hundreds of staff and their supporters poured into the street in front of the headquarters. Just before they marched from the sidewalk to the asphalt, they recited their oath of office.

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Protesters blocked traffic on 14th Street NW in front of USAID’s former offices. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

Some staffers cried as they carried out grocery bags and wheeled suitcases with what was left of their life’s work. One balanced the remnants of a career in three plastic tubs on a skateboard. He is on administrative leave — he thinks. He was locked out of agency communications, he said, and unable to confirm.

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A USAID worker said he believes he is on administrative leave but is unsure of his status as he is locked out of his communications. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

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Patrick Issa, deputy director for management and operations at the center for education, holds a USAID seal that he took from the agency’s former offices. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

Inside, as Summer walked across the second floor, she thought of her colleagues abroad, who she said had to pull their children out of school and scramble back to the United States when their jobs evaporated.

And she thought of the years she and her colleagues had poured into forging relationships with communities and businesses around the world, and how it felt like those relationships were being shredded before her eyes.

“Lifesaving health programs, work combating terrorism, supporting communities so they’re stable and don’t fall into conflict — that is what we did,” Summer said in an interview. “The idea that getting rid of that work will make Americans safer, stronger, more prosperous is ridiculous and devastating.”

She grabbed a white mug, Polaroids of colleagues from across the globe and some decorative flowers made of tissue paper. A colleague had given them to her on her first day and, in the years since, Summer had offered them to new hires as a welcome present.

She helped clean out the desks of others who couldn’t make it. It was happenstance she was even able to attend. In recent years, she’s worked remotely, raising her family in Colorado.

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Summer embraces a woman after leaving the agency’s former offices. (Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post)

Under security escort, other staffers stripped their cubicles bare and emptied their desk drawers. They grabbed wedding photos and crayon drawings from their children. They took plants, wilted because the shuttered office had left no one to water them. Badges from a recent G-7 Summit. A ceramic bowl from a peacekeeping mission in Sudan. A blue rubber wristband that said “Ukraine.”

“Sure it’s just stuff, but it meant something to me to be at a global conference representing the United States,” said a former USAID employee who, like some others interviewed for this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of professional retribution. “I don’t think the people dismantling us understand why we chose public service careers in the first place: We care about our country.”

Summer walked out of the building and burst into tears at the cheers greeting her. A small crowd enveloped her in hugs. One woman handed her a yellow rose. Another gave her a small paper bag of cookies.
Another person said she ultimately decided not to retrieve her belongings. The work was close to her heart; she had been a refugee as a child. But she left the photographs with her husband and her dog for the building’s next occupants.

“So they know we are real people,” she said.


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“Lifesaving health programs, work combating terrorism, supporting communities so they’re stable and don’t fall into conflict — that is what we did,” Summer said in an interview. “The idea that getting rid of that work will make Americans safer, stronger, more prosperous is ridiculous and devastating.”
Yeah, yeah. Charity's great and wonderful. So easy to affect this noblesse oblige when it's not your money that you're spending.

Taking my money from me and giving it to other people around the world doesn't make me safer, stronger, or more prosperous, it just impoverishes me twice over.

Try making something for once in your life, fed. Work at it day and night, consume years of your life, build something good. Then have more than half of it taken from you in taxes. Then be told those taxes were so people can trans their kids in foreign countries. Then you will know why everyone is happy you're getting fired. What regular taxpaying Americans have had to put up with has been a giant insult, and every one of these feds has some responsibility in that.
 
She helped clean out the desks of others who couldn’t make it. It was happenstance she was even able to attend. In recent years, she’s worked remotely, raising her family in Colorado.

They took plants, wilted because the shuttered office had left no one to water them
A very large percentage of these people probably worked from home. Those precious kids' drawings are from 5+ years ago. If none of that stuff was important enough for them to take from the real office to the home office, it wasn't necessary to retrieve said clutter (unless you're looking to create AOC-tier photo-ops, natch).

The other mention of a displaced employee was someone "working" out-of-country. We used to leave that kind of outreach to the Peace Corps and missionaries.
 
She had helped clear land mines in Nepal and supported youth programs in Lebanon
I never voted for gorillions of my tax dollars to go to these things, and I cannot think of something less measurable and more designed to flush money away forever than Third-World "youth programs".

Another, bundled in a rain coat, shook her homemade maracas — a soda can filled with pennies.
Deport the theatre kids, please.

supporting communities so they’re stable and don’t fall into conflict
A ceramic bowl from a peacekeeping mission in Sudan
Can we point to any place on earth where this has been a success, and not just another "we did more work than ever last year, but the problem is worse than ever, so we need an even bigger budget" story?

Peacekeeping in Sudan was such a failure that around 2012 they carved out South Sudan to end their latest civil war, and within a year, South Sudan devolved into its own decade-long civil war. We're supposed to keep paying hundreds of billions for stuff like that?
 
In a sane world, they should have been punched in their face on the way out the door. Fuck them.
 
“Lifesaving health programs, work combating terrorism, supporting communities so they’re stable and don’t fall into conflict — that is what we did,” Summer said in an interview.
Those are all good things, certainly, but what did you get in return for the money spent?

Nations need concrete ROI on programs like this, it's an investment, not foreign charity on the public dime. Every dollar wasted on foreign programs that doesn't advance or benefit your national interest is wasted, no matter how good or noble the goal is. The Soviets learned this lesson the hard way.

E.g. you help them with something like this, you get something concrete in return that advances your interests. Preferential tax treatment, investment rights, first claim on export-limited goods, ideological/propaganda victory, basing rights, etc.
 
Yeah, that's what happens to regular Joes when the company decides the line has to go up some more...

They get told they've been dismissed and have to clean out their desks and be walked directly to the front door by security. No stopping for hugs and photographs, that's a trespassing charge.

And they might even then decide to dock your last paycheck for things you "refused" to turn in that you were never informed were expected back? Like you pencil jar?

And inform you of it through your email account you can no longer access because it was shut off, and you couldn't read it even if you wanted to?

So you get a bill from collections in the mail 9 months later with no idea where it came from?

Even though it's still sitting in a dark, empty office because you never took it with you?

Oh, and no Federal Judge will issue a midnight order that you go back to work.....

Not fun is it?

But, you told us all for years that we were making that all up, getting jobs in the best economy ever was easy, And if all else failed? We deserved it.
 
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Those are all good things, certainly, but what did you get in return for the money spent?

Nations need concrete ROI on programs like this, it's an investment, not foreign charity on the public dime. Every dollar wasted on foreign programs that doesn't advance or benefit your national interest is wasted, no matter how good or noble the goal is. The Soviets learned this lesson the hard way.

E.g. you help them with something like this, you get something concrete in return that advances your interests. Preferential tax treatment, investment rights, first claim on export-limited goods, ideological/propaganda victory, basing rights, etc.
Those are all good things, certainly, but what did you get in return for the money spent?

Nations need concrete ROI on programs like this, it's an investment, not foreign charity on the public dime. Every dollar wasted on foreign programs that doesn't advance or benefit your national interest is wasted, no matter how good or noble the goal is. The Soviets learned this lesson the hard way.

E.g. you help them with something like this, you get something concrete in return that advances your interests. Preferential tax treatment, investment rights, first claim on export-limited goods, ideological/propaganda victory, basing rights, etc.
There also has to be an established RoI on the cost of paying to send college-educated Americans abroad for years. They get a first world middle class income to do a dubious quantity or quality of services in the 3rd world. It reminds me of how leftists are quick to correctly point out how churches spend a small fortune to send missionaries abroad for dubious "missions", when they could just send the money to an organization over there. But I don't want America funding "youth services" abroad, period.
 
Congratulations for being part of a system that facilitated money laundering of billions of dollars and providing materiel to known terrorist organizations, motherfuckers.

My question....how can a contractor be any sort of director, much less a senior director within an organization? What's wrong with this picture? Doesn't sound proper or legal to me.
 
Return this misappropriated Federal property immediately.
I was made to understand that taking things from federal offices and carrying them around was part of insurrectionist behavior and you should be put in forever jail and held without trial or representation if you did that, especially if you did it in a federal building in DC.
 
See, that's supposed to be an article telling about something horrible that makes you sad, but it has the exact opposite effect on me. It makes me super happy. My smile got bigger and bigger as the examples of sadness piled up!
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“I thought my hands might get tired from clapping,” she said
Me too!
 
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