Raumfahrt - NASA workers plan 3rd protest at D.C. headquarters on Sept. 15 to decry Trumps science funding cuts

14.09.2025

'Congress says they want to save NASA. Let's see them do it now.'

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NASA employees are once again taking to the streets to raise awareness about deep science cuts and layoffs at the space agency.

 

A third "Save NASA" protest is set for Monday, Sept. 15, outside the agency's Washington, D.C. headquarters. The demonstration is being organized by NASA Needs Help — a group formed by employees and supporters at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and endorsed by the Goddard Engineers, Scientists and Technicians Association (GESTA).

Monday's event is scheduled to take place between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. EDT (1200 to 1700 GMT), according to an event website. It will be the group's second protest outside NASA headquarters, and third this summer taking place in the nation's capital.

In an email, NASA Needs Help announced a list of expected speakers:

 
  • Rep. Suhas Subramanyam, VA-10 - House Cmte on Space, Science, and Technology
  • Monica Gorman, Area Vice President, Goddard Engineers, Scientists and Technicians Association (GESTA) - Union representing Goddard technical civil servants
  • Colette Delwalla, Executive Director, Stand Up For Science
  • Dr. Mollie Manier, National Institutes of Health, signer of the Bethesda Declaration
  • Matthew Biggs, President, International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers (IFPTE) - National body for GESTA

Organizers say they are fighting to preserve NASA's science programs and workforce in the face of what they view as pernicious preemptive compliance with President Trump's fiscal year 2026 (FY 26) budget request before Congress has finalized a funding bill.

Demonstrations by members of NASA's workforce began at Goddard in June, where job losses and potential mission shutdowns sparked employee and community pushback. Dismissals earlier in the year by Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) — formerly led by SpaceX CEO Elon Musk — and at-risk notices sent out to contractors working on missions marked for cancellation in the President's budget request have stoked fears of uncertainty and stripped employees' sense of job security.

Organizers say the campaign has grown with each protest, shifting from local concerns in Maryland to a broader appeal for national visibility. A parallel protest to NASA Needs Help's June 21 "Moon Day" demonstration was also held by workers at the agency's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

The group argues that current cuts not only threaten ongoing missions, but also risk dismantling decades of expertise across NASA centers. Departures of those who signed up for the government's deferred resignation program (DRP) are compounding fears from those sticking around that even if funding is restored, programs will have lost an irreparable amount of institutional knowledge.

This third protest also follows on the heels of an Aug. 28 executive order from President Trump that disbanded employee unions at NASA and other agenciesunder the justification of national security — a decision GESTA and other worker advocates warn removes employees' right to respond collectively during a time of mounting turbulence.

The White House's FY 26 budget request calls for a 24% reduction to NASA's overall funding, with a 47% cut to agency science programs and a total elimination of NASA's Office of STEM Engagement (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) and its education initiatives. And while the President's budget has yet to be signed into law, protest leaders point to layoffs already underway, active spacecraft marked for premature decommission and projects halted midstream as evidence that real damage is already underway

Quelle: SC

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