Dozens of high-ranking officials were supposed to see an increase in their salary, while hundreds of thousands of federal employees and government contractors are unsure when they will see their next paychecks amid the partial government shutdown.
Last month, Congress failed to extend the pay freeze on the raises, which would have ended effectively on Saturday and let the increases kick in.
But the OPM "believes it would be prudent for agencies to continue to pay these senior political officials at the frozen rate until appropriations legislation is enacted that would clarify the status of the freeze," Margaret Weichert, the acting director of the Office of Personnel Management, wrote in the memo.
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OPM plans to issue new guidance once Congress passes updated legislation, Weichert said in the memo.
OPM's move comes after Trump
issued an executive order last week freezing federal workers' pay for 2019, following through on a proposal he announced earlier in the year. The executive order nixed a 2.1% across-the-board pay raise that was set to take effect in January. It does not affect a 2.6% pay increase for US troops that was passed as part of the massive defense spending bill Trump signed in August.
After a news conference Friday, Pence
nodded "yes" when asked by reporters if he would turn down the pay raise during the shutdown.
Cabinet secretaries, deputy secretaries and ambassadors were set to see pay increases.
Before the OPM issued its memo, President Donald Trump had said Friday he "might consider" asking these officials to not accept their raises because of the shutdown.
CNN's Sarah Westwood and Veronica Stracqualursi contributed to this report.
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