Going forward, the emails will be required on a weekly basis. Those who work on classified and sensitive projects can respond ...
A second email asking government workers to detail what they did in the last week went out to some agencies on Saturday.
Let's pretend your boss, or your boss' boss, or Elon Musk wants you to tell them what you accomplished at work last week.
Behind the scenes, cabinet secretaries compared notes as they tried to figure out how to respond to a directive from ...
Individual federal agencies will handle what actions to take against employees who did not respond to an email asking them to ...
The Department of Defense took to social media site X to publicly tell its employees to ignore, at least for now, an email ...
U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman issued a temporary restraining order Monday morning that prohibits both the DOE and OPM ...
Federal workers faced conflicting guidance from the president, their agencies and union leaders around a request to detail ...
It was not signed by a government official, but it had Elon Musk's blessing, Monday's amended lawsuit said. The billionaire's ...
Well, over the weekend, people outside the federal government realized that seemingly anyone can send an email that will ...
Hegseth’s directive comes after Pentagon officials instructed DoD employees not to respond to a Feb. 22 “What did you do last week?” email over concerns classified information would be shared.
Despite backlash over firing of government employees, the Elon Musk-led DOGE sent the first “what did you do last week?” ...