Those assurances come after the White House abruptly fired more than a dozen inspectors general last month ... State, Education, Agriculture, Labor, and the Small Business Administration, filed a ...
An inspector general of the U.S. Department of Agriculture—one of 17 inspectors ... told colleagues that she intended to stay after the White House terminated her via email and that she didn ...
(CNN) — Eight inspectors general whom Donald Trump fired from their federal agency watchdog posts are suing for their jobs back, adding to the legal scrutiny over Trump’s first weeks of decisions in ...
The eight inspectors general want a judge to declare their firings by email were "legally ineffective" and put them back to work.
While presidents have the authority to remove inspectors general, the now-terminated employees argue that Trump did not provide Congress with the legally required 30-day notice outlined in the ...
WASHINGTON — Eight government watchdogs have sued over their mass firing that removed oversight of President Donald Trump's new administration. The lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court in ...
A report from the USAID inspector general says that almost $500 million in food assistance is sitting in ports, ships and warehouses.
WASHINGTON — The White House fired the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for ... the Food for Peace program under the Department of Agriculture. Farmers, a politically important bloc for ...
The USAID inspector general did his job and did it well. For his trouble, he was apparently fired by a White House found his work politically inconvenient.
Inspectors general fired by President Donald Trump are suing to get their jobs back as watchdogs for waste and fraud at federal agencies.
It’s not immediately clear whether the firings are legal, as the Trump administration is required to give a 30-day notice.