Opinion · 117th Congress
The oversight House Republicans could do — but probably won’t
Rogers, R-Ala., the expected incoming House Armed Services Committee chairman, is calling for a U.S. military buildup to counter China.
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Rogers, R-Ala., the expected incoming House Armed Services Committee chairman, is calling for a U.S. military buildup to counter China.
So I couldn’t disagree more,” Senate Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters, according to several media accounts.
Jackie Walorski, R-Ind., who was killed in an August car crash, didn’t request earmarks.
“I’m a business guy,” National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Rick Scott, R-Fla., told CQ Senate on Tuesday. “The first step in fixing a problem is acknowledging you have one.”
EPA Administrator Michael Regan, an alum of North Carolina A&T, was among those introducing Biden in Greensboro.
John Paul Hammerschmidt, R-Ark., attend a 1991 memorial service for Rep. Silvio Ottavio Conte, R-Mass.
Calling upon those reserves of goodwill and admiration, Zelenskyy — clad in one of the short-sleeve olive green T-shirts he has become well known for since the invasion — urged lawmakers to think
In a letter, CEOs of Intel Corp., AT&T Inc., 3M Co. and 33 other big corporations said Tuesday that it “could be the last chance to avert the consequences of failing to act before the end of the first
James R. Comer, ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Reform Committee, and North Carolina Rep. Patrick T.
Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and Bill Cassidy, R-La., 23 Democrats and two Republicans urged the IRS to consider steps including a pause on automated collections of unpaid taxes, dropping fines for taxpayers
Bob Good, R-Va., arrives on the House floor in the Capitol before members of the 117th Congress are sworn in on Sunday.