Zachary Schermele at  USA TODAY:

For New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan, it felt personal watching more than 120 jobs tied to special education disappear during the U.S. government shutdown.

 

President Donald Trump ordered massive layoffs across the federal workforce, which critics see as part of an effort to pressure Democrats like Hassan into voting to end the ongoing budget crisis that now stretches into its third week. The firings included roughly a fifth of the U.S. Department of Education – and nearly everyone in its special education division, per court documents and the agency’s union.

 

That’s particularly painful to Hassan, a second-term lawmaker and former governor with a son, Ben, who was born almost four decades ago with cerebral palsy, a neurological condition that affects movement and posture. While in school, the senator’s son needed some of the very programs she says now have an uncertain fate without people to manage them.

 

“This is a real blow to children and families all across the country,” Hassan told USA TODAY in an interview. “I don’t have constituents asking me to shut the door on kids with disabilities.”