Mark Warner and Tim Kaine each own a piece of the announcement from Donald Trump about the opening of an immigrant concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay.
Last week, just days after his inauguration, Donald Trump eliminated the membership of a key committee that handles aviation security. And on Wednesday night, a passenger plane collided with a military helicopter in the Washington, D.C., area.
The Trump administration has told around two million federal workers they can resign via email in exchange for a payout. Under plans to drastically shrink the size of the US government and push out civil servants who do not support the Republican, employees were told they could receive eight months’ pay if they took up the offer.
President Donald Trump is offering to pay out civil servants who don’t wish to remain part of his administration. The Office of Personnel Management told federal workers in an email sent Tuesday that they would receive pay and benefits until later this year as long as they part ways with the government by Thursday next week.
USA TODAY reported that under current federal guidelines, only certain employees are eligible for severance pay.
A group of Virginia Democrats are lashing out at President Donald Trump for his executive orders targeting federal workers. Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner released a joint statement, saying Trump is attacking the federal workforce by weakening protections that shield them from “politically-motivated mass firings” and “imposing an across-the-board” hiring freeze.
Tim Kaine, D-Va. "And I think it’s harder to make that critique ... And I fully support him in doing that." Before he took office:Donald Trump's pledge of 'major pardons' for Jan. 6 defendants had allies, critics on edge "What's a disgrace is Liz ...
We’ve been pretty plain about our [safety] concerns, but it isn’t a good time to speculate right now,’ Senator Tim Kaine said Thursday
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s second confirmation hearing highlights vaccine skepticism, bipartisan concerns, and his plans as health secretary nominee.
Less than 24 hours after a mid-air collision at the Washington D.C. National Airport killed as many as 67 people, President Donald Trump argued that tragedy was the result of is predecessors' hiring practices.