“Americans are getting laid off all the time in the private sector,” Watters pointed out. “Mass layoffs. The Washington Post just laid off 4% of its workforce. Are fired writers being interviewed on 60 Minutes? No. Southwest Airlines just laid off 15% of its workforce. That's, like, the one airline that hasn't crashed. What's the difference?”
Watters continued to double down in the following days, claiming on February 21 that “these layoffs aren’t personal. They’re not even really political. It’s basic arithmetic.” The following Monday, he repeatedly argued that federal workers who “think you’re entitled to your job” require an “attitude adjustment.” “You either have a winning attitude, or the attitude of a loser,” Watters chastised.
On February 25, he characterized federal employees refusing to name five of their accomplishments as lazy or basically nonexistent, then played a clip of a TikToker claiming that “our government is filled with the most incompetent and most lazy people and an occasional hard worker.” The next day, on The Five, Watters defended firing national park rangers.
Watters also echoed his colleagues like Sean Hannity, who last week told a caller on his radio show pleading for veterans’ jobs to be spared, “There will be other opportunities.”