Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In the politically-twisted world of government budgeting, it can be hard to tell what everyone is up to.
In today's Federal Newscast, the American Federation of Government Employees is bashing a White House proposal to cut funding and staff at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Members on the House Veterans Affairs Committee say they plan to double down on their oversight of VA's electronic health record modernization amid a recent decision to delay the initial rollout.
Exactly a month out from when the Census Bureau will roll out its internet self-response platform for the 2020 population count, the Government Accountability Office has flagged significant IT challenges.
The likely amount is now a 3.5% bump up in January 2021, but anything could happen.
The Air Force will present a plan to Congress in March with more details on a Guard component.
In today's Federal Newscast, Senator Josh Hawley unveils a plan to give the Federal Trade Commission more authority to help regulate companies like Facebook and Google.
The Defense Department does not regularly check recruits' social media before allowing them in the military.
In what’s become the administration’s evergreen budget plan, the White House has again proposed that federal workers kick in more of their salary toward their retirement plan in return for smaller lifetime annuities that are frozen when they retire.
The department had planned to deploy the multibillion dollar EHR at its first site in Spokane, Washington, next month. Officials said they would announce a new schedule "in the coming weeks."
If history repeats itself, the budget President Donald Trump sent to Congress Monday afternoon will again be a political bombshell
The Defense Department is requesting $705.4 billion in 2021 in a budget it says will focus on dominance across the air, sea, land, space and cyberspace by investing in joint programs that bring the domains together.
With more of what to expect between now and the next recess, we turned to long-time Congress watcher and The Fulcrum editor in chief David Hawkings.
To explain the bill and what's going on, Norton joined spoke to Federal Drive with Tom Temin.