President Trump posted a SpongeBob meme mocking federal employees in the wake of an email sent to the workforce asking them ...
A Georgia congressman genuinely thinks that children, as in literal children, should work their way through school to pay for their lunches so that American taxpayer dollars can go towards ...
Before joining Raw Story, Brad Reed spent eight years writing about technology at BGR.com and Network World. Prior to that, he wrote freelance stories for political publications such as AlterNet ...
McCormick also pivoted on Brown’s point that Trump has paused federal grants for childhood cancer research, pointing out that Trump proposed a $500 billion project on AI, which could help detect ...
GOP Representative Rich McCormick suggested that free lunch allows schoolchildren to "sponge off the government." ...
President Donald Trump ped fun at federal workers grumbling about being asked what they accomplished at work. Workers received an e from the Office of Personnel Management […] ...
The government stated its intent is to “act as faithful stewards of taxpayer money” by ensuring all spending aligns with the current administration’s agenda. Since Congress is responsible ...
Georgia Rep. Rich McCormick accused free lunch programs of teaching school-aged children how to "sponge off the government" during an interview on Tuesday. When asked by CNN anchor Pamela Brown ...
“How many people got their start in fast food restaurants when they were kids?” McCormick told CNN’s Pamela Brown. “Versus just giving a blanket rule that gives all kids lunches in high ...
Bill Clark via Getty Images Rep. Rich McCormick (R-Ga.) suggested kids who participate in school lunch programs “sponge off the government.” “How many people got their start in fast food restaurants ...