Government, shut down
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The government shutdown has underscored why the Air Traffic Control system shouldn't be part of the government.
President Trump signed a bill reopening the government Wednesday night, but it will take more than a day for some things to return to business as usual. We're tracking those here.
The Trump administration began large-scale firings of federal workers this week as part of an aggressive strategy to pressure Democrats during the ongoing government shutdown, marking one of the most sweeping workforce purges in modern U.S. history.
At a Wednesday briefing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt blamed Democrats for the federal government’s failure to release the October jobs report. KAROLINE LEAVITT, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: And our economy has lost billions and billions of dollars in economic activity over the course of this shutdown,
A new deal to end the government shutdown may briefly restore staff to U.S. Education Department offices that had been gutted by layoffs.
The new contract is designed to evolve the service into a next-generation, modular architecture enabling identity proofing, credentialing and authentication.
The government shutdown is over. But hundreds of thousands of federal workers are coming back after 43 days to anything but normalcy, employees from across the country told CNN.
The House approved a bill to reopen federal government that President Donald Trump signed on Nov. 12. What’s next?