New Federal Firing Authority: What MPA/MPP Professionals Need to Know

Breaking down OPM's suitability rule, Schedule Policy/Career reclassification, and what these changes mean for civil service careers and public administration studies.

By Carrie HirschReviewed by PAP Editoral TeamUpdated July 12, 202622 min read

What you’ll learn in this article…

  • OPM rule enables firings for suitability, effective July 30, 2026.
  • Removed employees face narrower appeal rights under suitability than misconduct.
  • Whistleblower protections remain, but at-will service creates a chilling effect.

On June 30, 2026, the Office of Personnel Management published a final rule taking effect July 30, 2026, allowing federal agencies to apply suitability and fitness standards, previously reserved for job applicants, to current employees. The shift crystallizes a longstanding tension in public administration: the drive for managerial efficiency and accountability against the procedural due process guarantees embedded in the merit system. For MPA and MPP professionals, the rule elevates core questions about who decides fitness for public service, and on what evidence. These questions sit at the heart of civil services reforms that have shaped federal employment for decades. Agency discretion expands while employee appeal rights contract, a realignment that will shape workforce morale and the practice of public management for years to come.

What the OPM Suitability Rule Changes and Why It Matters

How do the new OPM suitability rules alter the landscape of federal employment security? The Office of Personnel Management published a final rule on June 30, 2026, that fundamentally shifts how the government handles employee conduct issues.1 Previously, suitability and fitness standards were applied only to job applicants. Now, agencies can extend these same criteria to current employees, effectively closing what OPM Director Scott Kupor described as a gap: "For too long, the federal government has had stronger tools to prevent someone with serious misconduct from entering public service than to address the same misconduct once that individual is already employed." This change, set to take effect 30 days later on July 30, 2026, gives agencies a new avenue to remove workers deemed unsuitable.

New Suitability Factors Expand Agency Reach

The rule, codified at 5 CFR part 731, introduces several new factors that agencies must consider when evaluating an employee's continued fitness. These include failure to meet financial or tax obligations, failure to comply with nondisclosure agreements (including refusal to sign one), theft, misuse, or loss of government property, and failure to meet legal requirements for federal service such as citizenship obligations.1 The removal of "refusal to furnish testimony" from the list of suitability factors drew sharp criticism. Kevin Owen, a partner at Gilbert Employment Law, told Federal News Network that this change represents "a significant overreach" and warned it could have "a chilling effect on federal employees engaging in whistleblowing activity." By striking that factor, the rule removes a potential shield for employees who might otherwise rely on the prior standard to protect their right to speak out.

Process and Procedural Safeguards

Under the new framework, agencies must refer suitability cases involving current employees to OPM, which holds final authority over the determination.2 Once OPM issues a decision, the agency has 5 working days to effect the removal. Employees receive written notice, an opportunity to respond, and the right to representation, but there is no entitlement to an evidentiary hearing. The final rule's preamble serves as the primary implementation guidance; no separate detailed memorandum was issued. OPM will only act upon an agency recommendation and does not initiate these actions on its own. The rule applies across the competitive service, career Senior Executive Service, and excepted service positions requiring fitness determinations.

Why This Matters for Public Administration

For MPA and MPP students, this rule is a case study in managerial flexibility versus employee due process. It raises core questions about civil service reform and merit system principles: should agencies have broader discretion to remove employees for post-appointment conduct that does not rise to the level of misconduct or poor performance? The chilling effect on whistleblowers, as Owen noted, could undermine government accountability. As this rule takes effect, federal workforce professionals must navigate a new landscape where suitability standards, once a gatekeeping function, now follow employees throughout their careers.

Federal agencies have always had multiple tools to separate employees, but the OPM rule creates a new pathway that operates on a fundamentally different legal foundation. It is critical for MPA and MPP professionals to distinguish suitability determinations from misconduct removals under 5 CFR Part 752 and performance-based actions under 5 USC 4303. Suitability is not about what an employee did, but about who they are judged to be, a character and fitness assessment that determines whether the individual is appropriate for federal service in the first place.

Three Distinct Paths to Separation

Misconduct removals address specific, proven incidents, such as theft, insubordination, or misuse of position. They follow Chapter 75 procedures, which include advance written notice, an opportunity to reply, and a reasoned decision. Performance actions, governed by Chapter 43, require agencies to establish performance standards, provide an opportunity to improve, and document failure to meet those standards before taking action. Both frameworks carry robust procedural rights, including full Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) review where the agency must prove its case by substantial evidence.

A suitability action under 5 CFR Part 731, by contrast, is a forward-looking fitness determination. It asks whether the individual is suitable for continued federal employment based on factors such as criminal conduct, dishonesty, alcohol abuse, or, now, tax compliance and adherence to nondisclosure obligations. This is fundamentally a character evaluation, not a disciplinary response to a specific infraction. The OPM rule extends these standards, long applied to applicants, to current employees, effectively allowing agencies to reevaluate an employee's fitness at any time. Understanding how federal administration best practices frame employee accountability helps clarify why this extension represents a significant structural departure from established norms.

How Suitability Differs from RIFs and Probationary Removals

Suitability actions should not be confused with reductions in force (RIFs) or probationary employee removals. A RIF arises from organizational restructuring, budget shortfalls, or lack of work, and follows complex retention register rules, including bumping and retreat rights. Probationary employees, who typically serve a one or two-year trial period, can be removed for virtually any nondiscriminatory reason with minimal procedural protections; the agency need only provide a brief written notice. Suitability presents a third, more consequential path, one that targets permanent, career employees but applies a standard originally designed to screen out applicants. This means that even a tenured employee, if deemed unsuitable, can be removed without the agency having to prove misconduct or performance failure.

Narrower Appeal Rights Under Suitability Determinations

The appeal rights for a suitability termination are materially narrower than those for an adverse action under Chapter 75. In a misconduct case, the MSPB conducts a de novo review of the charges and can mitigate penalties. For suitability cases, the MSPB review is limited: the board examines whether the agency followed required procedures and whether the suitability determination was arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion. The agency is not required to prove a specific act of wrongdoing; it need only demonstrate that, considering all the suitability factors, the employee is no longer fit for service. This lower evidentiary burden and deferential standard of review make it much harder for employees to successfully challenge a termination, a gap many analyses overlook.

The "Subversion" Factor and Constitutional Tensions

Among the new suitability factors is "subversion of Presidential directives." At face value, this suggests that noncompliance with a direct order from the President could render an employee unsuitable. However, the term is broad enough to invite expansive interpretation. Could it be applied to an employee who criticizes an administration policy, leaks information, or refuses to implement a directive they deem unlawful? For MPA and MPP careers in federal civil service, this factor directly implicates First Amendment rights, whistleblower protections, and the merit system principle that employees should be free from reprisal for lawful disclosure. The constitutional questions are profound: by defining suitability as alignment with presidential priorities, the rule may blur the line between loyalty and fitness, potentially chilling speech and undermining the apolitical civil service that students of public administration are taught to defend.

Questions to Ask Yourself

This distinction determines whether you face broader agency scrutiny based on character judgments, or more familiar processes tied to job performance and misconduct. It could affect your job security and appeal rights.

Expanding removal criteria to include fitness assessments gives managers greater discretion, potentially undermining due process protections that historically limited arbitrary terminations. This shift raises questions about accountability in federal employment.

The merit system aims to protect against patronage and ensure fair treatment. Broadened firing authority could erode those safeguards, making public service roles less stable and potentially deterring qualified candidates from entering government work.

Step-By-Step: How Agencies Can Now Fire Federal Employees Under the New Rule

The Office of Personnel Management's final rule, effective July 30, 2026, lets agencies apply applicant-screening suitability standards to current federal employees. This five-step process outlines the new removal procedure and highlights what changed from prior practices.

A five-step process showing how agencies identify, investigate, determine, notice, and decide removal for federal employees deemed unsuitable under OPM's 2026 rule.

Schedule Policy/career Reclassification: Who Is Affected and How

The creation of Schedule Policy/Career federal workforce changes has permanently shifted the employment status of thousands of senior federal employees, moving them from traditional civil service protections into at-will positions with limited recourse.

Classification Matrix: Five Categories of Federal Employees

  • Competitive service career: High due-process protections; removal must follow formal procedures for misconduct or performance; full MSPB appeal rights and access to multiple review stages.
  • Schedule Policy/Career reclassified: Limited protections; removal is at-will without cause; limited MSPB appeal rights, only for claims like whistleblower retaliation or discrimination.
  • Probationary employees: Minimal protections; can be removed for almost any reason during the probationary term; appeal rights restricted to discrimination or retaliation allegations.
  • Excepted service employees: Protections vary, but generally fewer than competitive service; removal governed by agency-specific rules; MSPB appeal rights may be unavailable or circumscribed.
  • SES members: Moderate protections; performance-based removal with some procedural steps; limited MSPB appeal rights, focused on procedural compliance rather than substantive review.

The 50,000 Target vs. 8,000 Reality

The executive order underpinning Schedule Policy/Career initially estimated that up to 50,000 positions could be reclassified.1 As of June 2026, OPM has converted roughly 4,800 positions affecting about 8,000 employees.2 The gap reflects a refined scope: agencies focused on senior, policy-influencing roles, and many eligible slots were already vacant. The result is a far smaller immediate change than the headline number suggested, concentrated in the highest echelons of the federal workforce.

Agencies and Grades: Where the Impact Lands

Of the 8,000 employees reclassified, 97 percent hold GS-15 or above positions.3 Fifty-four agencies converted roles, but the impact is uneven.2 The Office of Management and Budget, a small, policy-heavy agency, reclassified 137 positions out of 518 total staff, a proportionally enormous shift. In contrast, the Department of Agriculture, with a workforce of 74,000, reclassified only 81 positions.2 These examples confirm the reclassification is tailored to small, decision-shaping units and senior leaders.

Parallel Paths: Reclassification and the Suitability Rule

Schedule Policy/Career reclassification and the broader OPM suitability rule are distinct but complementary mechanisms. The executive order changes a position's classification, stripping certain employees of competitive service protections and making them at-will. The suitability rule, published separately, allows agencies to apply fitness standards to current employees, creating new grounds for removal without altering job classification. Together, they give agencies two independent levers for addressing workforce issues: one that reshapes job status, another that broadens the definition of misconduct. Both developments sit at the center of ongoing civil services reforms in the federal employment system.

Appeal Rights, Due Process, and Whistleblower Protections After Reclassification

Employees terminated under the new suitability rule face a narrower path to challenge their removal than those subject to traditional adverse actions. While misconduct and performance-based firings typically allow for a full appeal to the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), suitability determinations offer only limited review. Agencies must still provide some procedural protections, but the scope of that review is far more constrained. For MPA professionals, this distinction highlights the tension between managerial flexibility and employee fairness.

Review Mechanisms for Suitability Terminations

When an agency fires someone for suitability reasons, the employee cannot appeal to the MSPB as they would for an adverse action. Instead, they may request a review by the agency itself or, in some cases, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). This internal review process does not guarantee an evidentiary hearing, and the burden of proof often rests on the employee. By contrast, an MSPB appeal in an adverse action case includes discovery, a hearing before an administrative judge, and a decision that can be further appealed. The procedural gap is substantial, leaving suitability determinations largely at the discretion of the agency.

Douglas Factors: Proposed but Not Yet Final

A related proposal at the MSPB seeks to eliminate the 12 Douglas factors, which currently guide whether a disciplinary action is reasonable.1 The proposed rule, published on July 2, 2026, would replace those factors with a vague "totality of the circumstances" test.2 However, this is only a proposal with a comment period ending August 3, 2026, and it carries no legal weight until finalized.2 As of mid-2026, the long-standing Douglas factors remain in effect, and any attempt to abandon them faces potential legal challenges.

Whistleblower Protections Remain Intact

Despite the reclassification of many positions to at-will status, statutory whistleblower protections under the Whistleblower Protection Act (5 U.S.C. §2302) still apply.3 These protections cover employees and applicants without regard to whether their role is career or policy. Legal experts emphasize that executive action cannot override a statute, so reclassified employees who report fraud, waste, or abuse retain the right to bring retaliation claims before the MSPB and the Office of Special Counsel.3

Kevin Owen, a partner at Gilbert Employment Law, warned of a "chilling effect on federal employees engaging in whistleblowing activity." The removal of "refusal to furnish testimony" as a suitability factor, combined with at-will reclassification, could discourage internal dissent. Employees may fear that any disagreement or protected disclosure will be mislabeled as unsuitability. Understanding public administration vs public policy distinctions matters here, because the legal frameworks protecting civil servants are rooted in administrative law, not just political convention.

Alternatives: Retirement, Resignation, and Deferred Options

For employees facing termination, several exit strategies exist. These include:

  • Standard retirement: Available to those meeting age and service requirements.
  • Resignation in lieu of removal: Often allows the employee to avoid a termination record, though forfeiting certain appeal rights.
  • Deferred resignation programs: Some agencies offer voluntary separation incentive payments during reorganizations.

Each option carries distinct consequences for future employment and benefits, and employees should consult with their agency's human resources office or legal counsel.

Legal challenges to federal personnel rules take two distinct paths: facial challenges argue that a regulation is unconstitutional on its face, while as-applied challenges contend it may be applied unconstitutionally in specific circumstances. For MPA/MPP professionals, understanding these distinctions is essential because they determine whether an entire rule is struck down or merely limited in certain applications.

Final, Proposed, and Pending: A Clear Timeline

As of July 2026, the OPM suitability and fitness final rule, published on June 30, 2026, is in effect and being implemented.1 Agencies are already using the expanded suitability criteria to refer cases of post-appointment misconduct to OPM, which retains sole authority to decide outcomes.2 No lawsuits have been filed against this rule, meaning no court has issued an injunction to halt it.2 Separately, the Schedule Policy/Career executive order has also faced no legal challenges, leaving agencies free to reclassify positions.2 In contrast, the OPM proposed rule on suitability action appeals, which would shift appeal hearings from the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) to OPM itself, is still a proposal and not in effect.3 The MSPB's own proposed rule to narrow the Douglas factors, which guide discipline severity, similarly remains in the proposal stage and has not triggered litigation.

Facial vs. As-Applied Challenges: What MPA Students Need to Know

When a regulation is attacked facially, the plaintiff must prove that no set of circumstances exists under which it would be valid. This is a high legal bar. For example, a facial challenge to the new suitability rule might claim the entire regulation violates due process because it allows removal for vague standards like 'misuse of government resources.'1 An as-applied challenge, by contrast, would focus on a specific employee's experience, arguing that their removal under the rule was unconstitutional even if the rule itself could be valid in other situations. This distinction matters for public administrators because it shapes the risks agencies face when implementing contested policies. Even if a rule survives a facial challenge, individual adverse actions may still be overturned if applied arbitrarily.

Practical Implications of 'Enjoined' vs. In Effect

For federal managers, the absence of any injunction means the suitability rule is fully operational. Employees facing suitability actions can appeal to the MSPB, but the underlying authority to remove them is not paused.1 Should a court later enjoin the rule, all pending suitability actions would likely be suspended, forcing OPM to revisit cases. Currently, the proposed appeals rule and the Schedule Policy/Career federal workforce framework remain in a state of regulatory limbo: proposed but not yet enforceable. MPA students should track these developments closely, as they offer real-time case studies in public policy making and the interplay between executive orders, rulemaking, and judicial review.

Implications for MPA/MPP Students and Public Administration Careers

How will the OPM suitability rule reshape the career landscape that MPA and MPP students are preparing to enter? The expansion of agency firing authority marks a significant departure from traditional civil service protections, with direct consequences for the public administration workforce pipeline.

Connecting Suitability Removals to Merit System Principles

The federal merit system principles, codified at 5 USC 2301, call for personnel actions based on ability, knowledge, and skills, and protection against arbitrary action. The new suitability rule introduces an additional layer of evaluative criteria including tax compliance, citizenship, and use of government resources that can lead to removal without a misconduct finding. This creates a tension between managerial flexibility and the merit principle that employees should be retained based on demonstrated competence. Public administration students must grapple with whether suitability assessments, applied retroactively to current employees, undermine the promise of a career system insulated from political or personal caprice. Understanding public service reforms in this historical context is essential for anyone preparing to enter the field.

Should Aspiring Civil Servants Reconsider Federal Careers?

For MPA and MPP students eyeing federal service, the rule recalibrates the risk-reward calculus. Historically, federal employment offered robust due process protections that rivaled or exceeded those of many state and local governments and the nonprofit sector. With the new rule, an employee could face termination for conduct unrelated to job performance, evoking comparisons to at-will employment prevalent in the private sector. While the majority of public administration graduates do pursue state, local, and nonprofit roles, those targeting federal agencies should weigh the reduced insulation against their tolerance for ambiguity. This shift may accelerate interest in state civil service systems where similar suitability reclassifications have not taken hold.

Managerial Flexibility vs. Bureaucratic Insulation

The reform aligns with New Public Management's emphasis on giving managers the tools to swiftly address workforce issues, echoing private-sector logic. Critics argue it erodes the Weberian bureaucratic model, which values tenure protections as a bulwark against politicization and arbitrary management. MPA curricula often examine this very tension: how to balance efficiency and accountability with fairness and employee rights. The OPM rule provides a real-time case study for courses on organizational theory, public personnel management, and administrative ethics, illustrating how legal changes can redraw the boundaries of the public employment relationship.

Adapting MPA/MPP Curricula for the New Reality

Programs should respond by embedding the suitability framework into core coursework. Administrative law classes can explore the legal basis and limits of the rule, including the interplay with existing adverse action procedures. Federal HR management courses must address the practical mechanics of suitability determinations and their impact on workforce planning. Ethics seminars can examine whether the new factors such as nondisclosure compliance may chill legitimate whistleblowing. Lessons drawn from career federal executives in public service leadership offer valuable perspective on navigating these shifting boundaries. Incorporating these updates will equip graduates to navigate a federal employment landscape where the line between applicant screening and ongoing employee evaluation has become increasingly blurred.

Frequently Asked Questions About Federal Employee Firing Rules in 2026

The 2026 OPM suitability rule marks a significant shift in federal employment, expanding grounds for removal of current employees. This FAQ addresses key questions for MPA/MPP professionals navigating these changes.

No. The rule allows agencies to apply suitability standards to current employees, but removal still requires a formal determination based on listed factors such as criminal conduct, tax compliance, or misuse of government resources. It does not create at-will employment; rather, it expands the grounds for initiating a suitability action while preserving some due process requirements.

Employees moved to Schedule Policy/Career (excepted service) generally lose access to Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) appeals for most adverse actions. They may have limited remedies, such as filing complaints with the Office of Special Counsel for prohibited personnel practices, but overall appeal rights are narrower than those of competitive service employees.

Standard misconduct and performance actions follow agency disciplinary procedures with MSPB review. The suitability rule introduces additional removal criteria, like failing to file taxes or improper use of government resources, that operate separately from performance improvement plans, giving agencies a distinct, potentially faster pathway to terminate employees on fitness grounds.

Yes. Whistleblower protections under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8) remain in effect for all federal employees, including those in excepted service. However, critics argue the expanded suitability rule could chill whistleblowing by creating new grounds for removal, even though OPM removed “refusal to furnish testimony” as a suitability factor to address such concerns.

The exact number is not publicly available. Agency-by-agency reclassification decisions under the order could affect thousands of federal positions deemed policy-determining or confidential, but no official aggregate count has been released, and estimates remain imprecise.

That phrase is not part of the 2026 OPM suitability rule. It may appear in separate executive orders addressing accountability. The new rule targets specific suitability factors including tax filing timeliness, proper use of government resources, and adherence to nondisclosure obligations, not broadly defined ideological noncompliance.

The final rule takes effect July 30, 2026. Federal employees should immediately verify their classification status, document any whistleblower-protected activity, and understand which removal mechanism applies to them: suitability, misconduct, or performance. Monitor ongoing litigation for changes to appeal pathways. For detailed guidance, consult the Federal Register final rule, OPM suitability standards, MSPB resources, and the Whistleblower Protection Act. Our coverage of Schedule Policy/Career and the federal workforce, professional development for public policy leaders, and whether an MPA is worth it for mid-career professionals provides additional context for navigating these changes.

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