Travelers won't feel impacts of the government shutdown
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President Trump signed a bill reopening the government Wednesday night, but it will take more than a day for some things to return to business as usual. We're tracking those here.
The first Azalea location already has its fans. Angela Christie, who works down the block at Georgia State University, grabbed a few items while on break on a recent morning. At 99 cents, a bunch of scallions was cheaper than at the supermarket she would typically drive to her from her home, she said.
In this episode of Tax Notes Talk, Tax Notes reporters Cady Stanton and Benjamin Valdez discuss the tax credit debate that led to the government shutdown and the potential effects on the IRS and the 2026 filing season.
The government shutdown impacted federal workers, food aid, travel and more. Here's where things stand five days after the government reopened.
President Donald Trump late Wedneday night signed a bill that will fund the government through Jan. 30 after the House passed it earlier Wednesday.
President Donald Trump has signed a government funding bill, ending a record 43-day shutdown that caused financial stress for federal workers who went without paychecks, stranded scores of travelers at airports and generated long lines at some food banks.
Georgians who need help to pay high winter energy bills could see delays getting that money because of the government shutdown that ended earlier this month, according to the agencies that administer the assistance program locally.
The government shutdown is over. But hundreds of thousands of federal workers are coming back after 43 days to anything but normalcy, employees from across the country told CNN.
After being elected in a landslide last year, Britain’s Labour Party government delivered a budget it billed as a one-off dose of tax hikes to fix the public finances, get debt down, ease the cost of living and spur economic growth.
The lawsuit filed by the Justice Department alleges the West Virginia Republican and his wife owe more than $5.1 million in taxes from 2009.