Lawmakers say they will withhold their pay, but is it constitutionally possible?
In today's Federal Newscast, Senators Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Mark Warner (D-VA) say federal agencies aren't proactively helping employees understand how or if they should pay taxes on moving expenses for their jobs.
Democrats won the House in Tuesday's midterm elections but several Washington, D.C.-area races and seats important to federal workers were more of a mixed bag.
For federal employees, these midterms could have significant consequences. Use our map to see a selection of key Senate races that could impact how federal employees do their jobs.
A group of senators want more answers from the Office of Personnel Management about how agencies are complying with an August court order that invalidated the president's workforce executive orders.
The General Services Administration (GSA) has selected Ad Hoc and Fearless to upgrade the search.gov platform.
Military installations in the path of Hurricane Florence are preparing to protect families and equipment.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie says he'll review some personnel moves and major agency actions himself, as 16 senators urge the new secretary to review a series of actions from prior VA leadership that have impacted career employees and executives.
Members of the Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works now hold one more piece of the Trump administration's rationale to suddenly reverse course on the construction of a new FBI headquarters.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin to share his feedback on the recent Trump administration's initiatives to reorganize the government.
In today's Federal Newscast, the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act cleared the House, bringing service members one step closer to a pay raise.
Military spouses face unemployment three times higher than their civilian counterparts. One group has come forward to help to turn that around.
A federal judge will hear a motion for summary judgment on several federal unions' objections to the president's recent executive orders in U.S. District Court on July 25.
More than a quarter of senators say they're concerned about the Office of Personnel Management's four legislative proposals to change federal retirement.
A specific population of federal employees, including those new hires and retiring senior executives who relocated for their jobs in 2018, are still seeing unintended consequences of the new tax act.