Congress · 117th Congress
Federal courts streamline path for judicial financial reports
The Judicial Conference of the United States is streamlining the process for judges to file financial disclosures and conflicts of interest.
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The Judicial Conference of the United States is streamlining the process for judges to file financial disclosures and conflicts of interest.
Ahead of the Ukrainian president's address to Congress, an envoy pleaded with Washington to provide more military hardware to fight Russia.
President Joe Biden withdrew Sarah Bloom Raskin's nomination to be vice chair of the Fed after what he called 'baseless attacks.'
U.S. lawmakers want more information from the intelligence community about deepening ties between China and the UAE, an American ally.
Unaccompanied minors will not be turned away at the border and denied a chance to seek asylum under the revised CDC order.
The EPA unveiled a rule to cut smog pollution from power plants and other industrial sources and drifts across state lines.
A Texas Supreme Court ruling on Friday has further closed the door on challenges to the state’s abortion law that bans nearly all abortions after six weeks.
The Biden administration is under increasing pressure by immigration advocates and Democratic leaders to scrap Title 42.
The CDC will craft a revised policy framework for future mask use on public transportation, a Biden administration official said.
Latinos were left out in 2020 at rates higher than previous decades, the Census Bureau found. White and Asian populations were overcounted.
Exxon Mobil reported it spent about $4.9 million lobbying federal lawmakers and regulators and more than $893,000 for state-level lobbying.
Congress is poised to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act as part of a sprawling fiscal 2022 spending bill.
Millions have fled Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, but those hoping to secure a U.S. visa will likely face long wait times.
The big defense budget Congress is set to pass marks a win for GOP defense hawks over progressive Democrats.
The measure would head off a partial government shutdown and resolves a partisan standoff over defense and nondefense spending.
In reaction to the invasion of Ukraine and sanctions that followed, firms are closing Russian offices or dropping clients.
The effort to protect the vulnerable is more nuanced in the newest phase of the pandemic, one with an easing of government mandates.
Call it Washington's "No-Fly Zone Island." Despite myriad warnings about a broader war with Russia, Sen. Joe Manchin III is its mayor.
As pressure builds to ban Russian oil and gas in the U.S., some lawmakers are pointing to a century-old shipping law as a potential hurdle.
A group of senators is introducing a bill to expand food aid for low-income troops, by not counting their housing allowance as income.