Trump's firings of the Senate-confirmed inspectors general included officials at Defense, State, Transportation, Labor, ...
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday defended President Trump's firings of at least a dozen agency ...
Federal law requires the White House to give Congress a full month of warning and case-specific details before firing a ...
The White House defied a law that requires giving Congress 30 days’ notice and detailed reasons before removing the watchdog ...
The dismissals appeared to violate federal law, which requires Congress to receive 30 days’ notice of any intent to fire a ...
NewsNation partner The Hill reported that Trump has ousted around 17 federal watchdogs within various departments ...
Lawmakers in both parties expressed concern that the White House might have circumvented federal rules in dismissing ...
The conversations about ousting these government watchdogs began during Trump's transition back to the White House.
A former inspector general claimed on MSNBC that President Donald Trump's mass firing of 17 federal watchdogs on Friday ...