Federal law requires the White House to give Congress a full month of warning and case-specific details before firing a ...
The conversations about ousting these government watchdogs began during Trump's transition back to the White House.
The White House defied a law that requires giving Congress 30 days’ notice and detailed reasons before removing the watchdog ...
It’s not immediately clear whether the firings are legal, as the Trump administration is required to give a 30-day notice.
The full scope of the Friday night mass firings was coming into sharper view as one fired watchdog official warned of “a ...
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump fired over a dozen inspectors general across federal agencies late Friday night, one of ...
The two-sentence long note to HHS Inspector General Christi Grimm cited “changing priorities” under Trump's new ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Several key U.S. Senate Republicans on Sunday defended President Donald Trump's decision to fire ...
The South Carolina senator admitted that Donald Trump broke the law with his mass firing of inspectors general.
Calif., on Sunday blasted President Donald Trump for his decision to fire 18 inspectors general late Friday night and accused the president of breaking the law.
The president’s mass firings of inspectors general were indefensible. The reactions from congressional Republicans added ...