"And that's what public servants should be. They shouldn't gleefully be wishing trauma on people who are trying to serve their fellow man” The post Tim Kaine Fumes At Trump Appointee In Tense Hearing Exchange For ‘Gleefully’ Wishing ‘Trauma’ On Federal Employees first appeared on Mediaite.
President Donald Trump is offering buyouts with eight months of pay to all federal workers who don't wish to return to the office.
Last week, just days after his inauguration, Donald Trump eliminated the membership of a key committee that handles aviation security. And on Wednesday night, a passenger plane collided with a military helicopter in the Washington, D.C., area.
The Trump administration is offering buyouts to federal workers. Read the memo the Office of Personnel Management posted for employees.
President Donald Trump is offering to pay out civil servants who don’t wish to remain part of his administration. The Office of Personnel Management told federal workers in an email sent Tuesday that they would receive pay and benefits until later this year as long as they part ways with the government by Thursday next week.
The Trump administration has told around two million federal workers they can resign via email in exchange for a payout. Under plans to drastically shrink the size of the US government and push out civil servants who do not support the Republican, employees were told they could receive eight months’ pay if they took up the offer.
We’ve been pretty plain about our [safety] concerns, but it isn’t a good time to speculate right now,’ Senator Tim Kaine said Thursday
Gov. Glenn Youngkin says the plane from Wichita, Kansas appeared to be on a "normal approach" before the collision with a military helicopter near Washington Reagan National Airport that killed
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) confronted Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at a Thursday Senate hearing with an X post in which he said he would "not take sides on 9/11."
A massive search operation is underway after a passenger aircraft carrying 64 people collided midair with a US Army Black Hawk helicopter near Reagan National Airport outside of Washington, DC, according to aviation and defense officials.
Part of the wreckage is seen as rescue boats search the waters of the Potomac River after a plane on approach to Reagan National Airport crashed into the river outside Washington, DC, January 30, 2025.