Policy · 117th Congress
Moderna asks FDA to authorize COVID-19 vaccine for kids under 6
Moderna said Thursday that it asked the FDA for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine in kids under age 6.
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Moderna said Thursday that it asked the FDA for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine in kids under age 6.
Bigger tax bills loom as pandemic-related global microchip shortages pinch the supply of new vehicles, limiting dealer deductions.
The FDA Thursday proposed a ban on menthol cigarettes and all flavored cigars, a move that could take effect in about a year.
President Biden is exploring using seized Russian government funds to rebuild Ukraine, a plan that poses some risk to U.S. taxpayers.
Some states are resisting financial institutions' efforts to include environment, social and governance issues in financial metrics.
Michigan Republican Bill Huizenga became frustrated at a House Financial Services hearing when remote attendees left their mics turned on.
Dynamics for a spending agreement this year are there, but history also says election years lead to delays and stopgap bills.
Generations of dignitaries, including three U.S. presidents, gathered Wednesday to remember the late Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
The former Amache internment camp in Colorado was recently named a national historic site. Thousands were held there during World War II.
The Homeland Security Department may not begin phasing out use of pandemic-related asylum restrictions before a planned end, a judge ordered.
President Joe Biden will ask Congress in his next supplemental funding request for Ukraine to include money to combat global hunger.
Companies providing long-term care insurance are leaving the business, raising the risk of higher premiums for patients.
The percentage of people with antibodies increased from 34 percent in December to roughly 58 percent in February, the CDC said.
The Supreme Court appeared hesitant Tuesday to require the Biden administration to return to Mexico any migrant it doesn’t have room to detain.
House and Senate conferees are going to work to iron out differences in their bills to help the United States compete with China.
Legislation would repeal the motor carrier overtime exemption in the Fair Labor Standards Act, which drivers argue increases turnover.
Defense manufacturers will struggle to quickly replace the weapons the U.S. and others are providing Ukraine, witnesses told a Senate panel.
Lisa Cook, who would become the first Black woman to join the Fed board, encountered another obstacle in COVID-19 cases among Democrats.
A judge indicated he intends to block the administration from winding down pandemic-related asylum restrictions ahead of their planned end.
The Supreme Court hears an immigration case that threatens to curb the power of presidents to reverse the policies of their predecessors.