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789 results for "‘The Interview."
CBO director to brief House members ahead of budget release
McCarthy cited growing interest costs — the CBO projects the government will spend $10.5 trillion on interest over the next decade — as a concern in an interview with CNBC Monday morning.
Trump wows one GOP group as another dreads his return in 2024
But the question of whether the future was through the GOP, a conservative wing of the Democratic Party or even a third party was at the root of the meeting.
Westerman sees bipartisan path for permitting overhaul
Westerman, currently in his fifth term, took over the chairmanship in January after one term as the ranking member.
Hogan decision not to run for president hits as potential supporters meet
But he did not bring up his decision not to run for president, which he shared that morning in a CBS News interview and a New York Times op-ed.
Government pensioners look to elbow into Social Security talks
Garret Graves, R-La., said in a recent interview. He described the issue as pervasive in his southern Louisiana district and one he saw firsthand working for a state coastal protection program.
Campaigns · 118th Congress
At the Races: Back to the future
Stepping down: Guy Cecil, the chairman of Priorities USA, will step down at the end of the month after eight years leading the Democratic super PAC.
Bryan Steil on the importance of doing the ‘homework’
In a February interview with Heard on the Hill, Steil, a self-described "modernist" who came to Congress from working in international law, vowed to target "archaic" processes on the Capitol campus from
There’s no escape from any country’s complicated history
Are the enslaved and the free Black people who helped build the country just a footnote in the official story?
Biden’s roller coaster of catastrophes
In a remarkable interview last Friday, ABC News anchor David Muir pulled back the curtain to reveal a President Joe Biden who seemed disconnected with the political reality swirling around him and his
Ice lab gets to the core of the climate crisis
Ice cores will underpin climate research for years to come, Brenda Ekwurzel, a climate scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in an interview.
Attorney general to face plenty of controversy at oversight hearing
Cruz previously called the search of Mar-a-Lago an abuse of power and alleged the Biden administration has "fully weaponized" the Justice Department and the FBI.
FCC’s spectrum auction authority nears March expiration
The House’s passage leaves the Senate a narrow window to clear the measure for the president’s signature before the FCC’s authority to conduct spectrum auctions expires on March 9.
Congress turns attention to oversight of Ukraine aid
This week, the House and Senate Armed Services committees and the House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee will hold the first open hearings on Ukraine aid oversight since the war’s start.
Republicans argue Biden student debt program is ‘major question’
"There’s no way that a president, any president, can just unilaterally cancel student debt, which is an appropriation without an act of Congress," Kennedy said in an interview.
Power Rankings: Biden claims top spot, McCarthy cracks top three
The PAC to which he’s linked, the Senate Leadership Fund, spent $290.9 million during the 2022 cycle. That’s not chump change.
War in Ukraine has reshaped global energy markets
That’s been delivered because of the supply shock of there being a lot less oil that people can buy," Rob Schuwerk, North America director at financial think tank Carbon Tracker, said in an interview.
Heard On The Hill · 118th Congress
Do you have to be a lawyer to work on the Hill?
Andrea Salinas learned politics — the good and the bad — as a young staffer in the 1990s.
Jewish Omar staffer targeted over boss’s comments decries religion-based hatred
In an interview with CQ Roll Call, Slevin talked about how being critical of Israeli policy does not make someone antisemitic and the armor he’s built up working for the congresswoman for four years.
House cafeteria workers eyeing pickets, walkouts if contract talks sour
The collective bargaining agreement for the House’s 35 caterers expired at the end of the year, while the contract for 120 dining services workers ends in May.