From the funding freeze to the federal-employee buyout, the White House doesn’t seem to know what its own teams are doing.
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.
The second week of his second presidency shows how an administration moving at lightning speed deals with sudden challenges: ...
Massachusetts Nonprofit Network CEO Jim Klocke said that the news was a relief for nonprofits worried about cutting employee hours and layoffs ...
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 ...
The White House Office of Management and Budget Jan. 29 rescinded a memo it issued two days earlier directing federal ...
The White House has said that the freeze will not affect funds for small businesses, funds for farmers, Federal Pell Grants, Head Start Services, and rental assistance programs. See a spelling or ...
Medicaid is a joint federal and state program that provides health care coverage to low-income individuals and families. It services over 79 million Americans.
The White House claiming the Wednesday move by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) rescinding a controversial order ...
President Trump signed an executive order calling for a federal "funding freeze," and Matthew J. Vaeth, the acting director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) subsequently issued ...
President Donald Trump said his administration blocked $50 million for condoms to be sent to Gaza through its pause on ...
Trump’s early, extraordinary steps pose a direct challenge to a fundamental underpinning of the Constitution: the power of ...