The Trump administration has temporarily paused grant, loan and other financial assistance programs at the Office of Management and Budget, prompting criticism from congressional Democrats.
The Trump administration has put a hold on all federal financial grants and loans, affecting tens of billions of dollars in payments.
The federal government fell into chaos Tuesday as officials braced for potential interruptions to programs that range from protecting food safety to responding to natural disasters.
As director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vought plans to implement the most critical parts of the new Trump agenda.
Presidents from both parties, including Trump, have let the budget grow and grow. The White House is trying to make changes on its own.
Everyone wanted to know the same thing — had the Trump administration actually frozen federal funds and would they be able to keep functioning? On Tuesday morning, the answer from Washington was, we’re trying to figure that out.
It gives a small win to those who say it would disrupt programs that serve tens of millions. Read more at straitstimes.com.
A new letter from Rhode Island's congressional delegates to the federal Office of Management and Budget asks the office to confirm that all previously approved funding for local projects will be released to the state.
President Donald Trump’s administration issued a memo Monday ordering all federal assistance to be temporarily paused, as Trump and his allies have argued he can block government funds that Congress has already authorized, despite a federal law forbidding it.
A move by President Donald Trump's budget office to at least temporarily halt federal aid to programs produced profound uncertainty on Tuesday, drawing condemnation from Democratic members of Michigan's congressional delegation and prompting the state's top law enforcement officer to threaten legal action.
The Constitution, federal law and court decisions make it clear: President Donald Trump's order to pause federal funding is against the law, legal experts tell ABC News.
This is what “unsustainable” fiscal policy looks like. Lawmakers haven’t even started talking about this problem, much less grappling with it realistically. The Congressional Budget Office has just updated its periodic assessment of “Options for Reducing the Deficit.