Congress · 119th Congress
Democratic attorneys general challenge Trump’s newest tariffs
A group of Democratic attorneys general filed a lawsuit Thursday challenging the tariffs President Donald Trump adopted last month.
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A group of Democratic attorneys general filed a lawsuit Thursday challenging the tariffs President Donald Trump adopted last month.
↵↵That's by far the most success they've had, both in the number of raw victory votes (1995's 345 was their previous high, number-wise) and percentage (89.7 percent in 2017 — Trump's first year in office
↵↵Republicans, meanwhile, appeared effusive, breaking out into multiple "U-S-A" chants and rising into standing ovations every few phrases. Rep.
Christopher S. Murphy told the crowd. "This union is in crisis right now."
Christopher S.
Christopher S. Murphy, D-Conn., Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., and Tina Smith, D-Minn., and Reps.
Congressional earmarks returned with a vengeance in fiscal 2026, with familiar faces topping the rankings in each chamber.
The House Rules Committee teed up legislation that would again prevent lawmakers from terminating President Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs.Â
s already limited autonomy.↵↵Recently, Norton has appeared to struggle through prepared remarks.
Seven months after Trump announced a Golden Dome missile shield, lawmakers say they have yet to learn meaningful information about the plans.
The Government Accountability Office’s new leader will be a veteran investigator with over three decades’ experience at the agency.
The Senate officially cleared legislation to compel the release of files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
↵↵The high-stakes meeting with Orban also exemplified Trump 2.0's preference to work around Congress — at times, the president, who's looked and sounded tired since returning from a Wednesday day trip
Christopher S. Murphy, D-Conn. "And we want to stay together."↵↵Sen.
California's redistricting turned Republican Ken Calvert's seat blue, so he'll run in an adjoining district held by GOPÂ incumbent Young Kim.
Christopher S.
The new Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee don't always jibe with their party's mainstream.
Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Tom Cotton, R-Ark., have both introduced counterpart resolutions related to D.C.’s noncitizen voting bill. Neither have any Democratic co-sponsors.
Krepich pointed to language in the Title 42 order that states the CDC “retain[s] the authority to modify or terminate the Order, or its implementation, at any time as needed to protect public health