Trump Administration

CIA offers buyouts as Trump administration continues to scale back government

Democratic lawmakers have said buyouts or deferred resignation offers to federal workers by the Trump administration are legally dubious.

File. The logo of the CIA is seen during a visit ofUS President Donald Trump the CIA headquarters on January 21, 2017 in Langley, Virginia .  Trump spoke with about 300 people in his first official visit with a government agaency.
Olivier Doulier - Pool/Getty Images

The CIA has offered so-called buyouts to its workforce, a CIA spokesperson said, the latest move by the Trump administration to overhaul and scale back the federal government.

The offer of eight months of pay and benefits is similar to deferred resignation offers proposed to employees at other federal agencies. But at the CIA, some employees — including those handling high-priority tasks — will not be eligible for the offer.

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“Director [John] Ratcliffe is moving swiftly to ensure the CIA workforce is responsive to the Administration’s national security priorities,” the spokesperson said.

During his confirmation hearing, Ratcliffe promised to keep politics out of decisions involving intelligence and said he would not use loyalty tests as a basis for hiring or firing CIA personnel.

“These moves are part of a holistic strategy to infuse the Agency with renewed energy, provide opportunities for rising leaders to emerge, and better position the CIA to deliver on its mission,” the CIA spokesperson said.

Federal employee unions and lawyers, as well as Democratic lawmakers, have warned federal workers not to accept the offers, saying that they are legally dubious and that Congress has not authorized funds for such sweeping packages.

The size of the CIA’s workforce, as at other intelligence agencies, has always been closely guarded and remains classified.

Ratcliffe, a former member of Congress from Texas who was President Donald Trump's director of national intelligence for a time during his first term, was confirmed as CIA director on Jan. 23.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

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