President Donald Trump was elected for a second time behind promises to remake the federal government. But achieving that goal will require administrative acumen.
It is unclear whether the pause will still take effect, given the administration's apparent U-turn and the legal challenges it faces.
From the funding freeze to the federal-employee buyout, the White House doesn’t seem to know what its own teams are doing.
The president’s pick for budget chief is on the verge of confirmation amid clashes over a spending freeze and worries about fiscal 2025 appropriations.
President Donald Trump has undone many of Joe Biden's progressive policies, if not the damage they inflicted, in less than ...
While the Trump administration intends to ax funding for initiatives it views as out of step with its priorities, it didn’t mean to blow up funding for a broader suite of programs.
At a Beaufort-Jasper YMCA groundbreaking in Hardeeville, U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn addressed the Trump Administration's rescinded ...
Massachusetts Nonprofit Network CEO Jim Klocke said that the news was a relief for nonprofits worried about cutting employee hours and layoffs ...
Anyone who thinks that we’re out of the woods is not paying attention,” said Rep. Jared Huffman Thursday, warning that threat ...
President Donald Trump caught his own administration off guard last week by suggesting that the nation’s primary disaster response agency might simply “go away.” ...
Give Trump some credit. He has no interest in faking empathy, as Biden did so ineptly. In Trump’s playbook, empathy is a ...
Uncertainty swept the nation this week when the Trump White House introduced a freeze on federal grants and loans, sending organizations across the country scrambling to figure out what would ...