News

The Department of Education (DOE) will initiate widespread layoffs following the U.S. Supreme Court’s July 14 ruling.
OPM’s guidance offers some leeway to the Trump administration’s policy requiring most federal employees to work in the office full time.
In all, 70,351 employees retired in the first six months of 2025 as compared to 56,756 employees who left federal service during the first six months of 2024.
Supreme Court rulings and provisions in the recently-passed budget bill are bolstering the legality of the administration's ...
Former deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman said he did not think Jerome Powell would agree to leave if the president asked ...
Instead, the justices found another path — a sneakier one. Repeatedly, they have let Trump amass vast new power, and they have done so without putting their names on it. They are proving willing ...
The Supreme Court allows Trump to proceed with Education Department cuts, a major shift impacting students, teachers, and ...
Employees have been told they’ll have less choice in where they land due to a tightened timeline after court fights over ...
Thousands of health workers lost their jobs this week after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling cleared the way for the Trump ...
The Supreme Court cleared the way for mass Education Department layoffs, bolstering President Donald Trump’s federal workforce cuts while legal battles continue.
She has become the great dissenter, sometimes siding with Justices Sonia Sotomayor or Elena Kagan or sometimes standing alone ...
The Trump administration asked the justices to set aside an injunction blocking its layoffs of 1,400 Education Department ...