White House, a shutdown and Presidency of Donald Trump
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A letter sent Wednesday indicates that the Trump administration is giving agencies leeway to launch more mass firings through the reduction-in-force mechanism used by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in slashing the federal workforce.
Democratic leaders have pushed back against the reported memo, saying they will not be intimidated by the threat of mass firings.
In a memo this week, prosecutors in Virginia recommended against potential plans by the new U.S. attorney there to charge ex-FBI Director James Comey, sources say.
The president is scheduled to sign a presidential memorandum on Monday, Sept. 15, though the White House has not clarified what the document addresses.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The State Attorney’s Office is defending its decision to clear the officers involved in the controversial arrest of William McNeil Jr. of criminal charges. The newly released 10-page memo shines a light on the rationale behind ...
DOD memo proposes establishing general to oversee acquisition work, but Pentagon official says the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base workforce would remain where it is.
Jeffrey Epstein provided information to the FBI on Sept, 18, 2008, according to a case agent involved in the federal investigation into the convicted pedophile.
President Donald Trump on Thursday signed a presidential memorandum directing an administration-wide effort aimed at cracking down on alleged "domestic terrorism" and "organized political violence." He said it was meant to tackle what he claimed was a rise in "bad people" and "anarchists" on the left and the groups he said funded them.
One of Big Tech's last remaining RTO holdouts is officially ending full remote work for many staff.
A White House budget office memo telling federal agencies to brace for mass firings in the event of agovernment shutdown has, CNN reports, "signaled a dramatic escalation in a funding staredown" and Democrats are not backing down.