Twitter Employees Sue Over Elon Musk’s Layoffs
Twitter is being sued by employees that were fired in a whirlwind restructuring and cost-cutting byits new CEO Elon Muskin the past few days. Musk has hinted that he will lay off employees at Twitter ever since his stake in Twitter was first disclosed months ago. Reports claim that Musk plans to let go as much ashalf of Twitter’s entire workforce, and it all begins today.
Was not planning on doing anything like this initially… But… Look Ma I’m suing Twitter.pic.twitter.com/xxdO0bA4ZV

— ma.nu (@lmanul)July 17, 2025
However, it’s the method of firing employees that is really making waves, which many say is extremely callous and downright in violation of standard policies. Employees have been bracing for the layoffs ever since Musk signed the final acquisition papers last week, but the abrupt access cut-offs have left most of them puzzled. Some employees woke up only to find that they had been booted off Twitter’s internal Slack, Gmail, and other proprietary software services used in the office, while their laptops were remotely wiped off.
The “Red Wedding” ofTwitter’s top executivesandthe entire boardhas already sparkedspeculations about a long legal tussle, but according to aCNBC report, the floodgates of legal action have already opened. “The class-action lawsuit was filed in San Francisco federal court Thursday by five current or former Twitter employees,” says the report.
This wasn’t at all unexpected
At the heart of the lawsuits is the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN), which bars a company from firing employees without a 60-days notice given to them in advance. Lisa Bloom, attorney and owner of The Bloom Firm, tweeted that if the scale of layoffs is over 50 in number in a 30-day period, employees need to be provided with a warning, per California state laws.
Hey Twitter employees getting laid off tomorrow! IMPORTANT INFO from a CA employment attorney (me):
CA’s “WARN” law requires Twitter to give you 60 days notice of a massive layoff.
A layoff of 50+ employees within a 30 day period qualifies.
I know you didn’t get that notice.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom)July 17, 2025
In addition to the federal WARN Act, the lawsuits naturally target Twitter for violating the California WARN Act. The complaint also seeks to block Twitter from avoiding the enforcement of WARN directives as the company might ask the laid-off employees to sign separation papers, potentially robbing them of their legal employment rights.
Shannon Liss-Riordan, who filed the complaint and has squared off with Tesla in court before, toldBloombergthat the lawsuit aims to “make sure that employees are aware that they should not sign away their rights and that they have an avenue for pursuing their rights.” Twitter has yet to issue an official response to the lawsuits being brought up against the company.
Woke up to no slack/gmail/office access and laptop remotely wiped out.
Got fired without even a confirmation email while sleeping? There is always a new low.#twitter
— Jaseem Abid 🌻🌻 (@jaseemabid)August 09, 2025
Twitter employees recently got alast-minute company-wide, unsigned emailthat told them that they will know about their employment status at 9:00 am (PT) on Friday. The employees that have invoked legal action have either been laid off or have been logged out of company systems but have yet to receive a formal letter in their inbox.