The Trump administration reversed its policy to freeze grants and loans while officials evaluated whether spending met the president's priorities.
The withdrawal of the federal freeze was a stunning about-face for President Donald Trump’s White House, which has so far pushed the envelope to reshape the federal government, sowing chaos and confusion in firing career civil servants, pausing foreign aid programs and offering federal workers a buyout.
President Trump’s allies and aides are learning to deal with Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who has had a consistent presence in the early days of the Trump administration. Musk had a front-row seat at
The incoming First Family is expected to return to the White House as President-elect Donald Trump prepares to take the oath of office for a second time on Inauguration Day, which will be held on Monday, Jan. 20.
The back-and-forth created confusion and fear that will linger beyond the lifetime of the memo, nonprofit leaders said.
The flood of executive orders and news was designed to disorient the Democratic resistance. It might be working.
The executive order was among several the president signed meant to steer American schools and universities to adopt Republican priorities, such as restricting how schools discuss racism and gender issues.
The White House is claiming the Wednesday move by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) rescinding a controversial order that froze a wide swath of federal financial assistance is not actually an end to curbing government spending.
From college campuses to city halls to nonprofit offices, leaders across Tampa Bay were left unsettled by the possibility of losing billions in federal funding Wednesday evening after a frenetic 48 hours of confusing and contradictory messaging from Washington D.
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.