All eyes are on President Donald Trump as we near his 100 days in office, which is Saturday.

To get reaction from the Trump administration, anchor Ybeth Bruzual traveled to Washington, D.C. for exclusive interviews with Cabinet and White House officials.

On Wednesday, Ybeth interviewed 10 officials working for President Donald Trump, who went in depth on issues concerning Florida and the new administration, including the border wall and immigration, public education, veterans affairs, the Interstate 4 corridor, federal help to fight brush fires and cutting the tax rate.

Here are the highlights from Ybeth's visit to Washington, D.C.

Wednesday

The big talk in Washington was a meeting between Trump and all 100 U.S. senators, who were summoned to the White House.

Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway shared with Ybeth Bruzual her response to criticism regarding the location of the rare meeting and why the senators were asked to come to Trump instead of the president visiting the Senate.

"(He's) a very engaged commander in chief, a very engaged president... on what he called the growing menace of North Korea.

"I don't even understand that criticism. The senators are more than happy to come here, and they did. (People should) focus on the substance. You're talking about people who are afraid about the situation in North Korea but then people want to criticize where the location was? We're not playing that game."

Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt also answered questions about the controversial practice of fracking in Florida. Pruitt supports the process but admits it could lead to earthquakes, as has been linked to ones in Oklahoma.

"It's something that should be looked at. Therein lies the concern for some people — and understandably so. That is something each state needs to evaluate. Oklahoma is very engaged in a robust response and has shut some wells down because of potential seismic activity."

Thursday

Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin, meanwhile, is frustrated there isn't a centralized hub for veterans' files to get them vital services that are desperately needed.

But “there is good news there. The VA is going paperless. Now, in 10 of our centers around the country, are doing our disability claims without paper, and that soon is going to be nationwide,” Shulkin said.

When the rollout is complete, a total of 56 VA centers will go paperless. No time frame was given for when all will be online.

Shulkin also said he'll seek more federal funding for mental health care and job creation for millions of veterans.

“The VA is one of the largest employers of veterans," Shulkin said. "We have over 100,000 veterans that work for us and private employers.”

JP Morgan and Starbucks, for example, are two big players that say they will hire more veterans.

“We provide behavioral health as part of the primary care setting. You don’t have to go to a separate building. You can get it as part of your regular care."

Next, Ybeth met with Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who addressed concerns about possible cuts of federal funding to some schools.

“The Every Student Succeeds Act returns power to the states about funding that comes from the federal level, and each state is in the process of putting their plan forward,” she said.