Jenna Norton, a program director with the National Institutes of Health, says she has been put on leave following the end of the government shutdown. She spoke critically of the Trump administration both before and during the shutdown.
Maansi Srivastava/NPR
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Maansi Srivastava/NPR
Jenna Norton, a program director at the National Institutes of Health, says she has been put on paid leave following the end of the government shutdown.
“I was not given a reason for being put on leave, but I strongly suspect it is because I have been speaking up in my personal capacity about the harms that I have been witnessing inside the National Institutes of Health,” she said in a video posted to TikTok.
Norton is among a number of federal employees who have been openly critical of the Trump administration, both before and during the 43-day shutdown.
In an interview with NPR in early October, she said she believed the Trump administration’s deep funding and staffing cuts have created a situation inside NIH that is far worse than the public realizes.
“I feel like I have this front row seat to the destruction of our democracy,” she said. “We are seeing it in real time with a president who is asking us to do things that are illegal and harmful to the American public.”
NPR reached out to the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees NIH, for comment on Norton’s leave status but did not immediately receive a response.
On Thursday, the Federal Unionists Network, a coalition of former and current federal workers and union members, announced that an Agriculture Department employee who worked on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) had also been put on leave.
Ellen Mei, who also serves as president of National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) Chapter 255, received a notice of proposed termination on Oct. 3, a day after she raised concerns about SNAP cuts in an interview on MSNBC, according to the Federal Unionists Network.
“I didn’t leak secrets or share anything confidential,” said Mei in a statement released by the group. “I told the truth about what’s happening to hungry families and the people who serve them. I took an oath to serve the public — not to stay quiet while our government turns its back on the American people.”
USDA also did not immediately respond to NPR’s questions about Mei’s leave status.
Norton says she believes federal employees not only have a right but an obligation to speak publicly on matters of the public interest.
“Allowing civil servants to put up a red flag when we’re seeing a problem is critical to maintaining our democracy,” she told NPR in October. “These civil service protections aren’t really about protecting me as a federal worker. They’re about protecting our country.”
