Skip to main content

Twitter workers call Elon Musk’s reported layoff plan ‘reckless’

With Elon Musk’s deal to acquire Twitter for $44 billion expected to go through by the end of this week, employees at the social media company have described the billionaire’s reported plan to cut the workforce by 75% as “reckless.”

A draft of an open letter seen by Time highlights a myriad of concerns regarding the expected takeover. The letter is signed “Twitter workers,” though it’s not known how many of the company’s 7,500 employees have put their name to it. A note sent to prospective signatories said signatures will not be made public “unless we have critical mass.”

The layoffs, which would see Twitter’s workforce shrink to around 2,000 people, will “hurt Twitter’s ability to serve the public conversation,” the letter said. “A threat of this magnitude is reckless, undermines our users’ and customers’ trust in our platform, and is a transparent act of worker intimidation.”

In a bid to make clear the magnitude of the issues facing the company if Musk takes control, the letter said that “a threat to workers at Twitter is a threat to Twitter’s future … We cannot do our work in an environment of constant harassment and threats. Without our work, there is no Twitter.” It called on Twitter management and Elon Musk to “cease these negligent layoff threats.”

The letter also set out a number of demands for whoever leads the company.

They include an insistence that Twitter maintains the current levels of staff, and that Musk explicitly commit to preserving staff benefits, including the ability to work remotely. This could turn out to be a flashpoint as Musk is known to dislike remote work, while Twitter said at the height of the pandemic that some employees could work from home “forever” if they wished.

In a clear reference to the ongoing drama regarding Musk’s on/off acquisition, the letter ended with a demand that Twitter workers be “treated with dignity, and to not be treated as mere pawns in a game played by billionaires.”

We have no idea whether any of the demands will be heard or even acted upon, but what is clear is that the story of Musk’s expected takeover of the social media platform has a long way to go, with more twists and turns likely over the coming weeks.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Twitter goes after ‘copycat’ app Threads
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

With Meta’s new Threads app having picked up 30 million users on its first day, it’s little wonder Twitter is upset.

In fact, it’s so put out by Meta’s very similar app that it’s now threatening to sue the company, accusing it of violating Twitter’s intellectual property rights.

Read more
Twitter’s head of trust and safety resigns
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Twitter’s Ella Irwin has resigned as the company’s head of trust and safety, confirming her departure to Reuters on Thursday.

Irwin stepped into the role following the departure of Yoel Roth in November, shortly after Elon Musk acquired the business for $44 billion.

Read more
Twitter ‘melts’ as it becomes first social app to launch a presidential bid
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Elon Musk’s plan to make Twitter the first social media platform to host the launch of a U.S. presidential bid didn’t get off to the best start.

The idea was to launch a Twitter Spaces session with Republican hopeful Ron DeSantis at a scheduled time on Wednesday evening, but when the event was supposed to start, the online audience waiting patiently in the audio-only Space was met with a sudden screeching sound.

Read more