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‘No one cares for him’: Trump appointee farmed out to menial jobs as co-workers revolt

A failed Donald Trump administration appointee to the Department of Homeland Security, whose nomination to head up the Office of Special Counsel was scuttled due to his well-documented racist past, ended up with a lesser job at the General Services Administration, where he has been greeted with nothing but loathing, reports Politico.
Paul Ingrassia, who has admitted he has a “Nazi streak,” was at the center of a firestorm after his OSC nomination, where GOP lawmakers made it clear he would not be approved. He then withdrew from consideration.
He was then shunted off to the GSA to the dismay of his future co-workers, one of whom complained, “What are we? A halfway house for bigots who can’t find jobs anywhere else in this administration?”
According to the Politico report, Ingrassia has not been welcomed with open arms and, despite being elevated to acting general counsel, the leadership of the agency is not entrusting him with anything important.
As one GSA official explained, the Trump ally, “basically won’t be given anything meaningful because [agency] leadership doesn’t really want him.”
“I don’t know what he is or is not, but no one cares for him,” another added.
The report adds that White House staffers were relieved they were able to find a department where he could be unloaded after his legal counsel nomination crashed and burned.
“Not sure anyone is like heartbroken,” one insider admitted. “It was never expected that it would go through, at least I never did.”
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Stroke survivor can’t access benefits as Social Security engulfed in ‘turmoil’ under Trump

An in-depth report published by the Washington Post on Tuesday offers new details about the damage being done to the Social Security Administration during President Donald Trump’s second term.
The Post, citing both internal documents and interviews with insiders, reported that the Social Security Administration (SSA) is “in turmoil” one year into Trump’s second term, resulting in a customer service system that has “deteriorated.”
The chaos at the SSA started in February when the Trump administration announced plans to lay off 7,000 SSA employees, or roughly 12% of the total workforce.
This set off a cascade of events that the Post writes has left the agency with “record backlogs that have delayed basic services to millions of customers,” as the remaining SSA workforce has “struggled to respond to up to 6 million pending cases in its processing centers and 12 million transactions in its field offices.”
The most immediate consequence of the staffing cuts was that call wait times for Social Security beneficiaries surged to an average of roughly two-and-a-half hours, which forced the agency to pull workers employed in other divisions in the department off their jobs.
However, the Post‘s sources said these employees “were thrown in with minimal training... and found themselves unable to answer much beyond basic questions.”
One longtime SSA employee told the Post that management at the agency “offered minimal training and basically threw [transferred employees] in to sink or swim.”
Although the administration has succeeded in getting call hold times down from their peaks, shuffling so many employees out of their original positions has damaged the SSA in other areas, the Post revealed.
Jordan Harwell, a Montana field office employee who is president of American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 4012, said that workers in his office no longer have the same time they used to have to process pay stubs, disability claims, and appointment requests because they are constantly manning the phones.
An anonymous employee in an Indiana field office told the Post that she has similarly had to let other work pile up as the administration has emphasized answering phones over everything else.
Among other things, reported the Post, she now has less time to handle “calls from people asking about decisions in their cases, claims filed online, and anyone who tries to submit forms to Social Security—like proof of marriage—through snail mail.”
Also hampering the SSA’s work have been new regulations put in place by Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency that bar beneficiaries from making changes to their direct deposit information over the phone, instead requiring them to either appear in person at a field office or go online.
The Indiana SSA worker told the Post of a recent case involving a 75-year-old man who recently suffered a major stroke that left him unable to drive to the local field office to verify information needed to change his banking information. The man also said he did not have access to a computer to help him change the information online.
“I had to sit there on the phone and tell this guy, ‘You have to find someone to come in... or, do you have a relative with a computer who can help you or something like that?’” the employee said. “He was just like, ‘No, no, no.’”
Social Security was a regular target for Musk during his tenure working for the Trump administration, and he repeatedly made baseless claims that the entire program was riddled with fraud, even referring to it as “the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.”

