Congress · 117th Congress
Mike Enzi, a lonely personal tech trailblazer
ANALYSIS — With the death of Mike Enzi, the Senate lost one of its great advocates for expanding the use of technology on the floor.
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ANALYSIS — With the death of Mike Enzi, the Senate lost one of its great advocates for expanding the use of technology on the floor.
The Senate voted 47-34 along party lines to confirm Ur Jaddou as US Citizenship and Immigration Services director.
DOJ told the Treasury Department it must turn over former President Donald Trump’s tax returns to the House Ways and Means Committee.
"Hearing in here is tough," House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy consoled members. Meanwhile, hot FERC summer isn't over.
Photos of the week: An infrastructure deal, the first Jan. 6 hearing, and mask confusion highlight our favorite photos as August looms.
The Biden administration announced the arrival of hundreds of Afghan special immigrant visa applicants in the U.S.
OPINION — Congress must pass a permanent legislative solution for Dreamers once and for all, rather than continuing to play politics over it.
The deal's negotiators had no sooner convened a celebratory news conference when the questions came rolling in.
A procedural vote on the infrastructure bill kicked off what is likely to be a contentious debate that could stretch through the weekend.
CQ Roll Call’s Jennifer Shutt and David Lerman discuss the road ahead for the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
A newly released Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report shows that vaccinated people can still be superspreaders.
OPINION — The debt limit has failed as a fiscal tool, and the battles over it in Congress are both predictable and dangerous.
The bill would spend billions to shift toward a less carbon-centric power sector, but some advocates say more needs to be done.
Six summers ago, Malcolm Graham lost his big sister, Cynthia Graham Hurd, in the Charleston shooting that took nine Black churchgoers' lives.
Both approaches would add billions of dollars to federal spending, and both would fall short of solving the affordable housing problem.
If congressional offices try to turn the clock back to pre-pandemic times, there could be a “quiet rebellion,” advocates say.
New reports highlight the enduring challenge of making the top tier of federal government employees look like the nation they serve.
“Sometimes you gotta live it,” says Tony Gonzales, who worked as a military fellow in Marco Rubio’s office before his election to Congress.
Texas Republican Jake Ellzey got a congratulatory call from Trump, who had endorsed his opponent, Susan Wright, in the special election.
Shareholder activists are putting more pressure on corporate executives to improve the relationship with workers.