Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
New data from Bloomberg Government shows agencies spent more than $1.8 billion on cloud services last year.
The Senate has four appropriations bills to debate and a high-level nomination to consider. The House will take up the issue of sexual harassment under its own roof.
This week on Capitol Hill look for that conference report on the National Defense Authorization Act and more debate on tax reform.
What is the state of government contracting? Find out when Bloomberg Government's Cameron Leuthy and Dan Snyder join host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center. November 5, 2017
Taking center stage this week is tax policy, as we expect to get our first look at the House’s version of a comprehensive tax reform package.
Now back in session, the Senate will take up a budget resolution for 2018 and markup appropriations bills for three big agencies.
A new House bill is named for a VA whistleblower who committed suicide. Another would give bonuses to employees who expose waste.
For contractors in the middle, life can be tougher, says Paul Murphy, senior data analyst at Bloomberg Government.
Bloomberg Government's annual "top" 200 federal contractors report shows big contractors did especially well. And mergers and acquisitions were at record levels despite fears of a downturn in government spending.
Bloomberg Government released its top 200 contractors for fiscal 2016 and found some interesting trends.
New data from Bloomberg Government shows more than 2,600 multiple award contracts across government, which is a drop of 8 percent over the last five years.
New data shows agencies bought $120 million more worth of agile services in 2016 than in 2015 as part of the growing demand for these capabilities.
The more bitter the arguments over the federal budget become on Capitol Hill, the more members might resort to anything. Especially if the Trump administration refuses to spend money it didn't want appropriated in the first place.
The more bitter the arguments over the federal budget become on Capitol Hill, the more members might resort to anything. Especially if the Trump administration refuses to spend money it didn't want appropriated in the first place. There's a law for that. Rob Levinson, senior defense analyst for Bloomberg Government, joins Federal Drive with Tom Temin to share the details.