Policy · 117th Congress
ESG lobbying surges with Democratic control of Washington
Chamber of Commerce covering 2018’s second quarter.
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Chamber of Commerce covering 2018’s second quarter.
Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, left, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., talk before the start of President Joe Biden’s address. (Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call) From left, Sen.
Parliaments in Europe, Asia and South America used digital voting during the pandemic. CQ Roll Call breaks down how Congress could go remote.
As Congress weighs Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan, how the money for passenger rail would be spent will be an important question.
It’s even more problematic for fiscal 2022 appropriations, since there’s little chance Republicans in the 50-50 Senate will go along with Appropriations subcommittee allocations, known as 302(b)s,
The House transportation chairman tried to keep the low-cost Norwegian airline out of the U.S. in 2016. Now it's back.
Christopher S.
Senate Homeland Security Appropriations Chairman Christopher S.
Schumer, D-N.Y., speaks during the news conference outside the Capitol to announce the introduction of S 1, the “For the People” Act, on Wednesday.
The Senate confirmed Xavier Becerra as President Joe Biden's health secretary. He will be the first Latino to hold the post.
The bill will be designated as S 1 to highlight its importance; the House-passed companion is HR 1.
Nobody dared to grab even a precinct and hurt Charles “Champ” Walker Jr.’s chances of getting elected. But Champ became his own worst enemy.
Christopher S. Murphy tweeted on Feb. 25. “We are going to end the filibuster in 2021,” California Democratic Rep.
On matters of policy, there’s little daylight between Democrats like Christopher S. Murphy of Connecticut and his Senate colleagues in neighboring Massachusetts, Edward J. Markey and Elizabeth Warren.
The Democrats got their way on 168 of 176 party unity votes for a winning percentage of 95.5 percent, only topped in the 60-year history of CQ Roll Call’s study by 2019’s 96.2 percent.
On votes that split a majority of Republicans from a majority of Democrats in 2020, the average Democratic representative voted with his party 98 percent of the time, matching 2019’s record level.
Donald S. Beyer Jr., D-Va., and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.
That 40 percent figure is in line with a Senate resolution (S Res 43) Sen. Edward J.
After spending weeks denouncing the mob attack on the Capitol and the past president’s role in the assault, Democratic stalwart Christopher S.
ANALYSIS — The Senate’s acquittal of former President Donald Trump on a charge he incited Jan. 6’s deadly riot at the Capitol indicates again the depths of the party polarization that afflicts the country