(UNITED STATES) President Donald Trump escalated pressure on air traffic controllers on Monday, publicly threatening to punish those who have not returned to work during the ongoing government shutdown as flight cancellations mounted across the country. On his Truth Social account, Trump wrote: “All Air Traffic Controllers must get back to work, NOW!!! Anyone who doesn’t will be…,” a post that, according to multiple news outlets, he used to threaten to dock the pay of controllers who remain off the job.
The post landed as the shutdown reached October 1, 2025 plus 40 days without a funding resolution, a stretch that has strained the aviation system and left federal employees unpaid. Severe staffing shortages among air traffic controllers led to widespread service disruptions over the weekend and into Monday morning. By 8:30 a.m. ET on Monday, more than 1,550 flights had been canceled and another 1,400 were delayed, following nearly 3,000 cancellations and almost 11,000 delays the previous day—the worst since the shutdown began, according to reports. The numbers reflect a system operating under unusual stress, with controllers missing paychecks and gaps widening on critical shifts.

In response to the staffing shortfalls, the Federal Aviation Administration suspended general aviation traffic at 12 airports, a list that includes Chicago O’Hare and Reagan Washington National. General aviation includes non-commercial flights such as private, business, and some charter operations. The move aims to free up controller capacity for scheduled commercial traffic and to reduce the load at key facilities. The FAA also ordered airlines to cut 4% of daily flights at 40 major airports, with reductions to increase to 6% on Tuesday and 10% by November 14, a schedule designed to gradually throttle demand to match available staffing.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the flight reductions will remain in place until air traffic control staffing and safety data improve, signaling no quick reversal as long as the government shutdown persists. The Department of Transportation and the FAA have emphasized safety as the guiding concern while curtailing capacity and diverting traffic. In practical terms, cutting scheduled flights spreads out departures and arrivals, creating more spacing in the skies and at busy control facilities so fewer controllers can manage traffic safely.
The public clashes over air traffic controllers’ attendance have intensified as delays multiplied and pressure built on elected officials to end the funding impasse. Trump’s post—“All Air Traffic Controllers must get back to work, NOW!!! Anyone who doesn’t will be…” — left the ending unfinished in the visible text but, according to multiple news outlets, carried a threat to dock the pay of those who do not return. The call is part of a broader push to force a return to work across agencies hamstrung by the shutdown. Controllers are among the most critical employees in the system; they coordinate the movement of aircraft on the ground and in the air, issue clearances, and maintain safe separation between planes. When they are short-staffed, even routine operations slow down, and disruptions ripple outward quickly.
The U.S. Senate moved late Sunday to advance a bill to end the shutdown, a sign that negotiations may be moving, but as of Monday the closures and their effects continued. The Capitol Hill maneuvering has not yet translated into restored funding, and agencies remain in contingency mode. For the FAA, that has meant consolidating duties, prioritizing commercial passenger operations over other traffic, and ordering airlines to trim schedules in a way that keeps the system running while safeguarding safety margins.
Cancellations and delays over the weekend illustrate how tight the margins have become. Nearly 3,000 flights scrubbed on Sunday and almost 11,000 delayed, followed by another wave by Monday morning, point to thin staffing at towers, approach control facilities, and en route centers. Cutting 4% of daily flights at 40 major airports is meant to relieve some of that pressure, but a planned ratchet to 6% on Tuesday and 10% by November 14 shows officials expect constraints to last at least several more days. The FAA’s suspension of general aviation at 12 airports—including two of the nation’s most closely watched facilities, Chicago O’Hare and Reagan Washington National—concentrates scarce controller resources where they are most needed for scheduled carriers.
Airlines have been forced to rework crew pairings and aircraft rotations as the mandated reductions take hold, and passengers across the country have woken up to last-minute cancellations or extended tarmac waits. Such disruptions tend to compound throughout the day: morning cancellations cascade into missed connections and overnight aircraft being out of position, making it harder to stabilize schedules. With air traffic controllers stretched, each weather cell or equipment outage that might be manageable under normal staffing becomes a potential choke point.
The standoff underscores how a government shutdown can move from political impasse to daily-life disruption quickly when it intersects with crucial infrastructure. Controllers are federal employees; in prolonged shutdowns they may be required to report without pay or be kept off duty depending on their roles and the agency’s contingency plans. Unlike other workplaces where absences slow production, missing personnel in air traffic control trigger system-wide safety measures—flow restrictions, ground stops, and capacity caps. Those guardrails are meant to prevent unsafe situations, but they impose real limits, and, over weeks, travelers and carriers feel the costs.
The FAA has asked carriers to plan for fewer slots and longer turnaround times, and it is carving out controllers for the busiest routes and times of day. Even with those measures, the weekend numbers—nearly 3,000 cancellations and almost 11,000 delays on Sunday alone—show how slim the buffer has become. By Monday at 8:30 a.m. ET, over 1,550 cancellations and 1,400 delays had already piled up, setting another difficult day in motion before noon on the East Coast.
Trump’s intervention injects a political jolt into an operational crisis. Threatening to dock the pay of absent controllers seeks to force people back to work, even as the government shutdown leaves paychecks uncertain. The argument is straightforward: get back in the tower and radar room now to keep planes moving. But the realities on the ground are complicated. Staffing pipelines for controllers are tight even in normal times, with training taking years and certification tied to specific facilities and positions. Shortages are not easily backfilled, especially when the workforce faces the stress of delayed pay and extended schedules.
The FAA’s capacity cuts are designed to be incremental. A 4% reduction spread across 40 major airports removes dozens of flights from the day’s schedule without collapsing service entirely. Increasing to 6% on Tuesday trims more, and the 10% cap by November 14 will bite more deeply into peak times if staffing does not improve. Suspending general aviation at 12 airports further narrows the load, especially at hubs where runway and airspace sequencing need to be tightly choreographed. The stepwise plan acknowledges that controllers need breathing room, with safety margins restored before volumes can be increased again.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s statement that flight reductions will stay until staffing and safety data improve places the onus on measurable progress rather than political timetables. That means passengers and airlines should expect continued constraints in the near term, regardless of the Senate’s procedural moves. If Congress passes a bill to end the shutdown, it would still take time to unwind the restrictions, re-staff critical positions, and work through the backlog of displaced flights and crews.
For information on current operational advisories and agency status, travelers and industry stakeholders can monitor updates from the Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA’s public notices reflect adjustments as they occur and provide the clearest signal of when the system might begin to recover capacity. Until then, airlines will continue to pare schedules, and controllers will be asked to manage traffic conservatively to keep safety margins intact.
As Monday unfolds, the practical effects are already visible. Reduced departure rates at large hubs create queues on the taxiways; inbound flights are held longer at origin airports to space arrivals; and discretionary movements, like some repositioning legs and non-commercial operations, fall to the back of the line or are halted entirely at the 12 affected airports. For passengers, the advice is familiar but sobering: expect changes, check flight status frequently, and be ready for rebookings as carriers navigate the mandated cuts.
The coming days will test whether incremental reductions can stabilize the system while the political branches argue over how to restore funding. Controllers remain at the center of the storm: the workforce that keeps aircraft separated and traffic flowing, yet one that is sensitive to fatigue, morale, and pay. With Trump declaring, “All Air Traffic Controllers must get back to work, NOW!!! Anyone who doesn’t will be…,” and reports that he intends to dock the pay of those who do not comply, the showdown over the skies has become a proxy for the broader fight over the government shutdown itself. Whether the Senate’s move leads to a deal, and how quickly that would translate into normal operations, remains unanswered as the clock on the shutdown ticks past 40 days.
This Article in a Nutshell
The October 1, 2025 government shutdown has left air traffic controllers unpaid and created staffing shortages that forced the FAA to suspend general aviation at 12 airports and order flight reductions of 4% (rising to 6% and 10% by November 14) at 40 major airports. Widespread cancellations—nearly 3,000 on Sunday and more than 1,550 by Monday morning—have disrupted travel. President Trump publicly urged controllers to return and reportedly threatened to dock pay; Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said cuts will remain until staffing and safety data improve.