Introduction
More than a year after the 2024 presidential election which returned Donald Trump to the White House, a new online poll conducted by the Partnership for Public Service shows that nearly half the country is noticing the impact of the administration’s cuts to the federal workforce and government programs.
The poll—conducted in September about two weeks prior to the government shutdown—found that 46% of respondents say they or someone they know have been personally affected by the government cuts. That is a substantial increase from a similar poll conducted in March when only 29% of respondents said they knew someone personally impacted. Most survey participants cited negative effects such as federal employees throughout the country losing their jobs or the decreasing access to government benefits. However, a small portion felt the changes were positive, citing reductions in wasteful government spending and lowering prices as examples.
The visibility of such cuts is particularly strong for younger adults. About 6 in 10 adults ages 18 to 24 say they know someone impacted, almost twice as much as the 33% of adults age 65 and above. This difference may be a result of the greater use of social media, or perhaps substantial cuts that have been made to education and the effect of the federal hiring freeze on people looking to enter the job market.
Opposition to the cutbacks remains strong with 51% of respondents opposing the changes compared with 43% who are in support. Those numbers are very similar to the levels of support the Partnership found in March—suggesting that opinions have not changed much over that time and that partisanship continues to be among the strongest factors influencing Americans’ views on the firings of federal employees and the loss of federal programs.
The survey also found that Americans are generally more supportive of reforms to “government” broadly than examples of specific reductions to federal personnel or funding. About two-thirds of respondents say they have concerns about consequences of cuts to each of the Department of Defense, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and health agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.
These results come from an online survey of 1,000 Americans conducted by the Partnership from Sept. 12-15, 2025, using a panel maintained by Prodege. While it is not a random, nationally representative sample, the Partnership used quota sampling techniques to resemble the demographic makeup of the U.S.




