A memo from the White House's Office of Personnel Management criticized "virtually unrestricted" telework and laid out next steps for agency heads.
The Office of Personnel Management tells agency and department heads they must close all DEIA offices by the end of Wednesday and put government workers in those offices on paid leave.
The State Department has already begun to implement the president’s memo cancelling telework agreements as of March 1 and remote work arrangements July 1, with exceptions for military spouses and employees with disabilities.
Employees in any federal diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility offices will be placed on paid administrative leave “effective immediately,” according to a post from White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
If passed, the bill would require the consent of governors of the state providing National Guard forces and the state receiving them if the president requests.
There are exceptions for military spouses and employees with disabilities in the policy, which DOGE leaders have touted as a way to shrink the federal civilian workforce.
The White House has instructed federal agencies to submit by Friday a detailed list of employees on probationary status and recommendations on whether they should remain employed. This aligns with President Donald
Read about an executive order signed by Trump directing federal employees to return to office on a full-time basis and another EO reinstating Schedule F.
President Biden delivered a two-word message to President-elect Trump at the White House on Monday. "Welcome home," Biden shouted to Trump, as the soon-to-be 47th president arrived outside the ...
By the end of Wednesday, heads of departments and agencies must start taking action to close all diversity, equity, and inclusion offices and put government employees working in those offices on paid leave, according to a notification from the federal Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
The House of Representatives passed a bill on Thursday to mandate doctors perform lifesaving care for babies born alive after abortion attempts.
President Donald Trump will soon issue pardons for pro-life activists convicted under the FACE Act for demonstrating near abortion clinics on Thursday.