USAID faces a slashing of its workforce to 290 employees. A lawsuit filed Thursday seeks injunctive relief to halt the cuts.
By Jonathan Landay, Patricia Zengerle and Erin Banco WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration plans to ...
A pair of labour groups representing employees at the agency sued the US President over his efforts to dismantle the ...
The largest U.S. government workers' union and an association of foreign service workers sued the Trump administration on ...
Follow the latest coverage as President Donald Trump participates in the National Prayer Breakfast. Live updates as the ...
A new Congress and a new presidential administration places both parties back at square one – and Republicans have an ...
A Trump wrecking ball hardly seems like the optimal way to reduce government spending. But legislators with purse power have done little on the big picture.
The evisceration of U.S.A.I.D. isn’t a policy fight—it’s an execution designed to strike fear in our own government.
The agency previously said some of its 10,000-strong global workforce would continue working to perform essential functions, but not how many that would be.
According to a recent Congressional Research Service report, USAID funded programs in 130 countries in 2023. Now, nearly all ...
WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) was ordered by Washington to stop work on dozens of ...