More than 1,000 employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs were fired amid the Trump administration's broad layoffs last week.
President Donald Trump's nominee to be the No. 2 official in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs was grilled Wednesday on Capitol Hill as the White House cleans out federal agencies, including the VA.
President Donald Trump has implemented a flurry of executive orders and policies that have touched nearly every corner of the federal government, and the Department of Veterans Affair has not been immune.
President Donald Trump’s federal hiring freeze is forcing terminations at the US Department of Veterans Affairs research office, jeopardizing projects that advance treatments for cancer, drug withdrawal and more.
The dismissals targeted non-union employees who had served less than a year in competitive jobs or fewer than two years in specialty positions that aren't subject to worker protections.
The destruction of the federal workforce is a desired feature of the actions Trump, Musk, the billionaire class and those aligned with Russian, Hungarian and extremist groups around the world are carrying out for their own benefit.
Staffing reductions in the Department of Veterans Affairs have prompted concerns that veterans' benefits may be cut.
The Trump administration’s swift, sweeping cuts to the federal workforce is set to derail the livelihoods of potentially thousands of military families.
The Trump administration has fired about 1,000 newly hired National Park Service employees as part of its broad-based effort to downsize government.
More than 1,000 employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) are out of work, part of President Donald Trump’s initiative to cut costs.
Over 100 protesters, including a large portion of veterans, rallied in downtown Feb. 21 against Trump's purge of the federal workforce.
President Donald Trump announced he had fired Gen. C.Q. Brown, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and planned to replace him with Air Force lieutenant general.