WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump fired over a dozen inspectors general across federal agencies late Friday night, one of ...
Federal law requires the White House to give Congress a full month of warning and case-specific details before firing a ...
The dismissals appeared to violate federal law, which requires Congress to receive 30 days’ notice of any intent to fire a ...
The full scope of the Friday night mass firings was coming into sharper view as one fired watchdog official warned of “a ...
The watchdogs say the removals may be invalid for failing to comply with a 2022 law requiring a 30-day notification to Congress before removals.
President Donald Trump’s administration fired the independent inspectors general of more than a dozen major government agencies late on Friday, according to reports. The agencies include the ...
The Trump administration has fired about 17 independent inspectors general at federal agencies, a move consistent with his efforts to reshape the federal government in his first few days back in the ...
Congress must hold the president accountable for these personnel decisions and take steps to maintain inspectors generals’ ...
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has fired more than a dozen independent inspectors general at government agencies, a sweeping action to remove oversight of his new administration that some ...
Sen. Jon Ossoff warns that the dismissal of 17 independent Inspectors General by President Trump could lead to corruption and ...
The internal government watchdogs were believed to have been dismissed at several major agencies, though the Justice Department’s was not said to have been among them.