Campaigns · 117th Congress
Democrats’ New York map could offset GOP efforts in other states
As New York loses one district overall, Democrats drew a map that could further reduce the number of Republican seats.
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As New York loses one district overall, Democrats drew a map that could further reduce the number of Republican seats.
Congress faces a Feb. 18 deadline to complete overdue appropriations legislation, but distractions are multiplying.
Democrats eager to enact some form of their "Build Back Better" package before the midterm elections are floating disparate strategies.
Anticipation of a fraught tax season is leading Democrats to consider more funding for the IRS to assist and educate taxpayers.
Jan. 6 panel sent subpoenas to 14 people who allegedly submitted fake slates of Electoral College votes for Trump.
Democrats anticipate a White House request for more pandemic relief, but it is sure to face questions about previous funds.
A Black employee at the Architect of the Capitol is suing the agency, alleging racial discrimination. It is the second such case recently.
The U.S. Forest Service plans to escalate its use of smaller fires as a tool to limit catastrophic blazes fed by decades of fuel buildup.
Congress has a chance to call Big Tech’s bluff with a suite of antitrust legislation that has a good shot at becoming law, Hal Singer writes.
The CQ Roll Call newsroom tracks campaigns around the country, sharing the best stories, with some extras, in this At the Races newsletter.
Supreme Court confirmation fights help both parties remind their base voters how important it is to win Senate seats.
President Joe Biden plans to announce a nominee by the end of February to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer.
The SEC held its first meeting of 2022 with no discussion of a rule that would require listed companies to disclose climate risks.
More than 70 percent of members of Congress who responded to Roll Call’s inquiries reported getting death threats.
The Biden administration’s program to make 1 billion COVID-19 rapid tests available to Americans appears to be exacerbating supply shortages.
Facing a surge in traffic deaths, the Department of Transportation released a new roadway safety strategy.
Wesley Hunt, a Black Republican candidate for an open House seat in Texas, raised more than $1 million in the fourth quarter.
The House version of a sprawling technology draft bill incorporates a host of climate-related provisions not included in the Senate version.
President Biden touts the proposal as a way to lower prices, as only 1 in 5 Americans who could benefit from a hearing aid uses one.
‘The world wasn’t always ready for me,’ says the Rhode Island Democrat, who is preparing to retire from Congress after 22 years.