Deep Reads: His wife was dying, his federal job crumbling. It tested his faith — in God and Trump.

深度阅读:他的妻子命悬一线,联邦职位岌岌可危。这考验了他的信仰——对上帝和特朗普的信仰。

Post Reports

2025-12-14

30 分钟
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In the spring, Edward Brandon Becham was caring for his dying wife. He was also among hundreds of thousands of federal workers weighing whether to abandon public service. Donald Trump had taken office vowing to slash the federal bureaucracy, then entrusted the task to billionaire Elon Musk and a newly created cost-cutting team called the Department of Government Efficiency. In a matter of months, Musk and his U.S. DOGE Service wiped out hundreds of thousands of jobs, billions of dollars in spending and the job security that once distinguished government work. Of America’s 2.4 million federal workers, nearly 4 in 10 registered to vote had, like Becham, cast ballots for Trump, according to a Washington Post-Ipsos poll. But as the days passed, Becham was becoming convinced that the Trump administration’s treatment of government employees — large-scale firings, emails he saw as harassing and strict return-to-office mandates — was wrongheaded and cruel. If he was unable to resign, Brandon would be required to report to a federal building in Las Vegas more than 70 miles away. Round-trip, it would cost him three hours a day with his three children, for whom he would soon be the only parent and sole provider. Becham felt as though he was witnessing two painful deaths: his wife’s, of course, but also that of his career. In his darkest moments, Brandon turned to his Bible — and next to it, his leather-bound diary. This story follows Becham and his family for a week as he navigated his feelings about his wife, family, his career and Trump. Hannah Natanson reported and narrated the piece. Bishop Sand composed music and produced audio. Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
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  • America is changing.

  • And so is the world.

  • But what's happening in America isn't just the cause of global upheaval.

  • It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.

  • I'm Asma Khalid in Washington, DC.

  • I'm Tristan Redman in London.

  • And this is the global story.

  • Every weekday, we'll bring you a story from this intersection where the world and America meet.

  • Listen on bbc.com or wherever you get your podcasts.

  • Hi, I'm Hannah Nathanson.

  • This is Post Reports Weekend.

  • This story is part of a Washington Post series called Deep Reads.

  • It's part of our commitment to narrative journalism.

  • I'm a reporter on the politics and government team,

  • and what you're going to hear in a moment is a story about one federal worker,

  • a Trump voter,

  • who tried to take the Trump administration's resignation offer four times as his wife was dying.

  • I'll be narrating it.

  • And instead of me just reading the quotes every time,

  • you'll also hear some audio I gathered during my reporting in Paramp, Nevada.