The former Long Island congressman has vowed to claw back $20 billion in Biden administration green energy grants.
Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, the top Democrat on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, said recent layoffs at EPA, coupled with Zeldin's comments about sharp spending cuts, show he had no intent to follow through on a pledge during his confirmation hearing to work collaboratively with EPA's staff.
The Arizona Senate president will visit the White House next week to discuss Environmental Protection Agency policies that he says are hurting the state and its businesses. Sen. Warren Petersen, the Gilbert resident who leads the chamber's Republican majority,
The president also said EPA has found "a lot of people that didn't exist" at the agency, but did not elaborate.
Administrator Lee Zeldin has reportedly recommended that the White House reverse an Obama-era finding that underpins
President Donald Trump recently said the Environmental Protection Agency would cut 65% of jobs as part of cuts, but the White House has since clarified that he was referring to spending – not jobs.
The White House on Thursday walked back President Donald Trump's claim the day before that the Environmental Protection Agency plans to cut 65% of its workforce, saying the environmental regulator plans to cut its spending by 65%.
Lee Zeldin, President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the EPA, made his first visit to the Chesapeake Bay area in February as administrator of the agency.
The Trump administration is weighing whether to repeal the “endangerment finding,” which states that greenhouse gases pose a threat to public health and welfare.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin speaks at the East Palestine Fire Department in East Palestine, Ohio, Feb. 3, 2025. (Rebecca Droke/Pool Photo via AP, File) President Donald Trump speaks to reporters in the Oval Office of the White House, Feb. 13, 2025 ...
Shortly after President Trump said Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin plans to cut 65 percent of the agency’s staff, the White House clarified and said Trump was
The White House on Thursday walked back President Donald Trump's claim the day before that the Environmental Protection Agency plans to cut 65% of its workforce, saying that the environmental regulator plans to cut its spending by 65%.