Lawmakers have narrowly passed a budget resolution in the House of Representatives in the first major congressional win for President Donald Trump and the Republican Party. But will Social Security be impacted?
Musk warned federal employees over the weekend that non-responses to the email would "be taken as a resignation."
Some beneficiaries who have certain public pensions, such as teachers, police officers and firefighters, were blocked from receiving 100% of their Social Security checks up until
Elon Musk’s team has descended on an already understaffed Social Security Administration, which now faces further workforce cuts and closures of vital local offices.
Social Security Administration says it is immediately starting to pay retroactive benefits due to more than 3.2 million retirees.
Data analyst Leland Dudek was suspected of sharing unauthorized access to information with the U.S. DOGE Service. Now he’s the acting Social Security commissioner.
Elon Musk’s team has descended on an already understaffed Social Security Administration, which now faces further workforce cuts and closures of vital local offices. The consequences could be significant for millions of the most vulnerable Americans.
Leavitt announced at Tuesday’s press briefing that the White House would now choose the press pool participants going forward Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who stepped down from office amid a sexual harassment scandal in 2021,
Because of the calendar, Social Security recipients who get Supplemental Security Income benefits get their March 2025 check on Feb. 28, 2025.
Workers at the Social Security Administration’s office in Birmingham were “unjustly terminated” by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell said Tuesday, as the congresswoman called out the billionaire’s “reckless power trip.
As billionaire Trump advisor Elon Musk continues to fire staff, cancel contracts, and eliminate office leases across the federal government, retirees, Social Security advocates, and Democratic politicians are fretting about what could happen to the agency that delivers cash benefits to some 73 million Americans each month—one charged with paying out $1.