It is unclear whether the pause will still take effect, given the administration's apparent U-turn and the legal challenges it faces.
From the funding freeze to the federal-employee buyout, the White House doesn’t seem to know what its own teams are doing.
Follow the action as three of Trump's most contentious picks for senior administration roles face questioning on Capitol Hill.
You can make all kinds of claims and promises when running for office. But once you’re in charge, you have to watch your words. There are consequences and real-life implications for the things you say ...
On Monday, the White House Office of Management and Budget put out a memorandum, which is not supposed to carry the weight of an appropriation passed into law by Congress, telling federal agencies to ...
Will the federal government freeze financial assistance or not? Who will be affected if it does? Those questions have been ...
The second week of his second presidency shows how an administration moving at lightning speed deals with sudden challenges: ...
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.
Massachusetts Nonprofit Network CEO Jim Klocke said that the news was a relief for nonprofits worried about cutting employee hours and layoffs ...
The Trump administration's recent pause on certain federal assistance and grant programs has sparked concern and confusion.
It came hours after he announced he was immediately appointing Christopher Rocheleau, a 22-year veteran of the agency, in the ...
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 ...