The National Christmas Tree is lit on the Ellipse near the White House on Dec. 2.

The National Christmas Tree is lit on the Ellipse near the White House on Dec. 2. Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

Feds Are Likely to Get a Half-Day Off on Christmas Eve This Year

President Obama gave civil servants an extra half-day off on Dec. 24 the last two times Christmas fell on a Friday. 

If history is a guide, federal employees may be in line for an extra half-day off around Christmas this year. 

Christmas will fall on a Friday, and the last three times that has happened, presidents have granted most of the federal workforce except essential workers an extra half-day of break on Christmas Eve. President Obama granted the half day in 2015 and 2009, when Christmas fell on a Friday, and President Clinton did the same in 1998. 

President Trump has not generally advocated for giving federal employees additional benefits, but he has been relatively generous in granting extra time off for Christmas Eve, which is not an official federal holiday. Last year he surprised the federal workforce by granting Dec. 24 off even though Christmas fell in the middle of the week, on a Wednesday. Trump also gave Christmas Eve off in 2018, to allow the federal workforce a four-day weekend. 

Executive orders granting the additional vacation time often come in mid-December.