News

Still pending before the Supreme Court this week is an appeal from Trump's lawyers that seeks the firing of three Democratic ...
Supreme Court rulings and provisions in the recently-passed budget bill are bolstering the legality of the administration's ...
The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Education Department to proceed with mass layoffs. But not all the firings were reversed.
The Trump administration is formally arguing before a federal oversight body that it has unilateral authority to fire many ...
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is moving ahead with a plan to cut 10,000 jobs after the Supreme Court lifted a pause on the layoffs.
OPM’s guidance offers some leeway to the Trump administration’s policy requiring most federal employees to work in the office full time.
In all, 70,351 employees retired in the first six months of 2025 as compared to 56,756 employees who left federal service during the first six months of 2024.
Education organizations told Sen. Elizabeth Warren that Trump's plans to dismantle the Department of Education will harm ...
While officials pointed to the department’s $1.8 trillion budget as a reason for the cuts, experts said payroll represented less than 1% of that amount.
The Harvard Kennedy School is offering 50 full-ride scholarships to public servants and veterans for a one-year degree ...
Oh, this one’s got some sparks flying already, doesn’t it? The headlines practically write themselves: a Supreme Court green light, ...
Former deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman said he did not think Jerome Powell would agree to leave if the president asked ...