Amid takedowns of various government sites and databases, several organizations are working to preserve vital climate, health, and scientific data before it’s gone for good. Over the past three weeks, ...
The Trump administration has been intensely scrubbing government and military websites clean. It has been tossing out DEI, gender ideology, race, and sexual identity information, among other things.
Federal agencies moved to satisfy Trump’s orders to remove topics like diversity initiatives and “gender ideology.” By Ethan Singer More than 8,000 web pages across more than a dozen U.S. government ...
The Trump administration is revamping agency websites to be rid of climate change-filled content, amid a widespread rebranding of federal departments from content deemed as not aligning with President ...
Vast quantities of climate and environmental information have been removed from official websites in the past months. Scientists are trying keep it available. By Austyn Gaffney Amid the torrent of ...
WASHINGTON — At least eight federal agencies are publicly blaming the government shutdown on Democrats or the left, a move critics say misuses U.S. government websites in a partisan messaging war.
NEW YORK (AP) — Army veteran Samuel Port couldn’t believe what he was reading in his latest weekly newsletter emailed from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. It blamed Senate Democrats for the ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development posted a banner on its homepage Tuesday blaming the government shutdown on ...
A watchdog group filed a complaint this week against the Trump administration for putting banners on federal websites blaming Democrats for the government shutdown. Public Citizen accused the Small ...
The Trump administration is putting Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia in charge of a newly created National Design Studio tasked with reimagining federal websites. Gebbia, who will serve as the US chief ...
WASHINGTON — At least eight federal agencies are publicly blaming the government shutdown on Democrats or the left, a move critics say misuses U.S. government websites in a partisan messaging war.