Policy · 117th Congress
Air Force takes hard look at racial disparities
In two reviews, the Air Force found significant racial and gender disparities in promotions and workplace discipline.
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In two reviews, the Air Force found significant racial and gender disparities in promotions and workplace discipline.
Conservative activist Edward Blum challenges Nasdaq rule, approved by the SEC, requiring its listed companies to disclose diversity data.
Former President Donald Trump has endorsed Harriet Hageman in a crowded Wyoming primary to oust GOP Rep. Liz Cheney.
The Capitol Police department is preparing for the possibility of violence at a protest that members of Congress have been invited to attend.
Capt. Sean Patton remembers a hectic time as the department was closing streets around the office buildings and the Capitol.
Medical providers are scheduled to report by Sept. 30 on how they spent the first wave of money from a $178 billion COVID-19 relief fund.
Capitol Police are monitoring increasingly violent discussions among far-right groups in connection to a Sept. 18 rally in Washington, D.C.
The Supreme Court announced that justices will return to in-person oral arguments in October for the first time since the pandemic started.
There's little time for Congress and the White House to negotiate a deal on the debt limit that can clear both chambers in the coming weeks.
‘Detainee 001’ tells the story of John Walker Lindh, the so-called American Taliban, and comes at a time of reflection 20 years after 9/11.
The president asked Trump appointees to the military service academy boards to resign and threatened to fire those who don’t quit.
American hubris led the military into Iraq and Afghanistan with missions they could never accomplish: to pacify and democratize.
OPINION — Americans put aside their differences to battle a common foe after 9/11. We won’t be seeing that sort of unity anytime soon.
Two veteran Capitol Hill staffers recall their experience on 9/11, including opening up their homes to their colleagues that day.
The House Ethics Committee announced it was opening probes into four members of Congress: three Republicans and one Democrat.
Two Afghanistan trips by House members as U.S. military forces withdrew from the country ended safely. That's not always the case.
Democratic leaders in the Senate need 10 Republicans to get out of their debt limit jam, and a desire for disaster relief might be the ticket.
The administration is seeking roughly $24 billion for disaster relief and $6.4 billion to support relocating tens of thousands of Afghans.
"Sending all your money to Silicon Valley in return for electronic tokens is not a way to stick it to the man," Rep. Brad Sherman says.
Some lawmakers want banks, oil and gas companies, tech providers, utilities and others to notify a top cybersecurity agency after an attack.