Trump broke the law last Friday night when he summarily fired 18 inspectors general and ignored the 1978 law that requires giving 30 days notice to the Congress and providing cause for such actions.
Whenever an epic national disaster happens, Congressional squabbling over relief funds is certain to follow as it undoubtedly ...
The White House removed the independent inspectors general of nearly every Cabinet-level agency including the Agriculture ...
A year after the Inland Northwest became the testing ground for a new computer system that promised to revolutionize veterans ...
President Trump's nominee to be top US spy, Tulsi Gabbard, and pick for FBI director, Kash Patel, face tough Senate hearings.
In order for the United States to remain “a government of laws, not of men,” all officials entrusted with elected authority ...
Kash Patel, President Donald Trump's nominee for FBI director, vowed on Thursday to protect FBI employees against "political retribution" even as the Trump administration has begun to fire and ...
President Donald Trump’s firings sets up another major legal clash over Congress’ power to put limits on the removal of ...
Congress must hold the president accountable for these personnel decisions and take steps to maintain inspectors generals' ...
One Harvard Law School professor was skeptical that the removal of the inspectors general was not legally allowed -- but he did point to other provisions of the Inspector General Act that would ...
Trump’s freeze on federal funds, fake buyout offers, and effort to fire inspector generals are about daring Democrats to try to stop him.
U.S. President Donald Trump has signed a blizzard of executive orders and taken other actions since his inauguration on Jan.