Maryland state lawmakers aren't breathing a sigh of relief just yet now that a freeze on federal grants and loans is apparently being rescinded.
Maryland leaders on Wednesday found little comfort in President Donald Trump’s decision to rescind an order to freeze all kinds of federal grants — a move that sparked panic in the state and across the country on Tuesday before a federal judge suspended it.
The Trump administration’s abrupt pause on trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans has drawn criticism from MD members of Congress.
The Trump administration has put a hold on all federal financial grants and loans, affecting tens of billions of dollars in payments.
Members of Maryland’s congressional delegation are concerned about recent actions of the Trump administration that they say are sowing fear and confusion. Chaos. Chaos. Chaos. That’s how some Maryland delegates describe the last 48 hours.
Leaders across the D.C., Maryland, and Virginia region, as well as federal lawmakers, are reacting to the tragic American Airlines plane crash near DCA.
A week into Donald Trump’s second presidency and his efforts to crack down on illegal immigration, federal officers are operating with a new sense of mission.
Authorities continue to search for bodies and determine what led to the Wednesday, Jan. 29, midair collision between an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac River in the Washington,
Star Members of a Philadelphia-area figure skating club were among the passengers presumed dead after an American Airlines flight collided with a U.S. Army helicopter Wednesday night while landing at Ronald Reagan National Airport.
Wednesday's crash was the deadliest in the U.S. since Nov. 12, 2001, when an American Airlines flight crashed into a residential area of Belle Harbor, New York, just after takeoff from Kennedy Airport, killing all 260 people aboard.
The email is the most sweeping effort yet by the new Trump administration to shrink the ranks of government employees.
Maryland Democrats at the state and federal levels huddled Wednesday to figure out a response to a Trump administration proposal that threatened billions in federal aid to the state before apparently being reversed,