Congress · 116th Congress
Road ahead: Dueling policing bills and DC statehood to get votes
The House and Senate will take up competing policing reform bills this week and the House is expected to pass a measure to make D.C. the 51st state.
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The House and Senate will take up competing policing reform bills this week and the House is expected to pass a measure to make D.C. the 51st state.
The Trump administration is suspending H-1B, some H2-B, J-1 and other visas through the end of the year, citing the coronavirus pandemic.
Congressional Democrats and an independent demanded that the Interior inspector general open an inquiry into the Park Police activities at Lafayette Square.
The House Armed Services Military Personnel Subcommittee has put forth a number of provisions spurred by recent headlines.
As appropriators move toward marking up spending bills, advocacy groups are asking them to increase legislative branch funding.
House Democrats on Monday released legislation to bolster the 2010 health care law, which the Rules Committee plans to consider this week.
Democrats thought they had a candidate to face Cotton, but he dropped out after the deadline to put someone else on the ballot had passed.
6 things to watch in Tuesday’s primaries - At The Races
Aliscia Andrews, who touted her support for gun rights and opposition to abortion, defeated three opponents at a party convention Saturday.
Both sides are galvanized to act on a policing overhaul. But whether that feeling of urgency leads to a new law depends on their willingness to compromise.
“By the time I’m finished, you will be clear that we’re not good friends,” said Cedric Richmond, defying the one remaining illusion of D.C. bipartisanship.
Rep. Sanford D. Bishop is the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation and it appears he is already paying a hefty price in legal fees.
Senators say her role delaying regulations to protect workers and consumers from chemical substances should be disqualifying.
The Census Bureau has resumed counting efforts in rural parts of the country, where workers drop off forms at each household without traditional mail.
As Democrats and Republicans continue quarrelling about the best path forward to open the House, coronavirus cases are increasing on Capitol Hill.
Election officials have to prepare for both voting methods — by mail and in person — which means more resources will be needed.
Trump says he will try again to end the program protecting undocumented immigrants brought to the US as children, despite the Supreme Court decision.
Hill recoils at proposed cut to Pentagon anti-pandemic effort - Defense
Rep. Matt Gaetz is continuing to talk about Nestor Galban and his family, describing himself as a 'single step parent' and in other ways.
CQ Roll Call photojournalists spent the week covering, among other things, a drive-thru convention, D.C. statehood and the Supreme Court’s DACA decision.