The White House fired the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for International Development on Tuesday, several U.S.
China is reportedly trying to fill the voids left in several countries by the Trump administration's freeze of USAID funding.
Eleven out of 12 claims about the agency’s work are misleading, wrong or lack context.
A constitutional law professor and a former USAID administrator are raising questions about President Trump's actions around USAID and what it could mean about the role of Congress in Washington.
President Trump’s White House fired the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) on ...
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, responding Wednesday to a question about a right-wing conspiracy theory, ...
“The long list of crap” funded by USAID, according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt included $2 million for sex changes in Guatemala, $6 million to fund tourism in ...
USAID workers based in Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of Congo, tell a harrowing story of how Trump’s attack on the agency ...
As President Donald Trump's second administration continued its effort to swiftly reshape the federal government, a union ...
"The decision to cut the operations of USAID … is myopic and will ultimately fuel the grievances that terrorists leverage." ...
The dismissal comes a day after the inspector general's office warned that the Trump administration's dismantling of the ...
The White House gave no reason for the firing of Inspector ... administration’s funding freeze and staff actions within USAID had left oversight of the humanitarian aid “largely nonoperational.” ...