Created among the post-Watergate government reforms aimed at increasing oversight and decreasing corruption and ...
Congress must hold the president accountable for these personnel decisions and take steps to maintain inspectors generals’ ...
Early in his first administration, President Trump noted the general’s “brilliance and fortitude.” And then the president got ...
President Trump’s mass firing of 17 inspectors general late Friday flouted the law and sparked widespread condemnation from ...
Media outlets say Trump "appears to have violated" federal law with his Friday Night Massacre-style firing spree — but what ...
Federal law requires the White House to give Congress a full month of warning and case-specific details before firing a ...
President Trump fired more than a dozen inspectors general at federal agencies. NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Glenn Fine, who was an inspsector general for more than a decade, about why it matters.
"President Trump is well within his power to remove members of the executive branch at will," law professor John Choon Yoo ...
The dismissals appeared to violate federal law, which requires Congress to receive 30 days’ notice of any intent to fire a Senate-confirmed inspector general.
The federal law mandates that the president must give Congress a 30-day notice and explain the reasons for firing inspectors ...
The watchdogs say the removals may be invalid for failing to comply with a 2022 law requiring a 30-day notification to ...
The firing of at least 15 inspectors general foreshadows a Donald Trump unbound and heedless of the rule of law.