News

The U.S. Supreme court has greenlit to the Trump administration to launch their plans for mass layoffs and reorganizations at ...
Thirty-four cities and counties, including Chicago and Los Angeles, have asked to join a California lawsuit seeking to stop the Trump administration from cutting federal funding based on sanctuary ...
A U.S. district judge in San Francisco had temporarily blocked large-scale federal layoffs known as "reductions in force." ...
The Court’s conservative majority has, once again, shrugged off the administration’s authoritarian motives in bypassing ...
Tuesday on the RealClearPolitics radio show -- weeknights at 6:00 p.m. on SiriusXM's POTUS Channel 124 and then on Apple, ...
Through this joint analysis, NPCA, ANPR, CPANP and PEER are holding the administration and Congress accountable to their duty ...
Federal workers are bracing for the uncertainty of what’s next after the Supreme Court cleared a temporary path for the Trump Administration to pursue its plans for mass layoffs. National President of ...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed Trump’s administration to move forward with sweeping federal job cuts, according to Reuters. The decision lifts a lower court’s block on mass layoffs tied to ...
The Supreme Court has issued an order allowing the Trump administration to move ahead with its plans to slash the federal ...
The Trump administration is making startling claims to justify its mass deportation of Nicaraguans and Hondurans.
President Donald Trump has the authority to lay off federal workers and reorganize the federal government in a way that critics say no president has been able to do in more than 100 years.