Congress · 117th Congress
Permitting overhaul puts usual allies in opposing camps
Environmentalists and clean energy groups have come out on opposite sides of the proposed permitting overhaul by Sen. Joe Manchin III.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Environmentalists and clean energy groups have come out on opposite sides of the proposed permitting overhaul by Sen. Joe Manchin III.
President Biden told gas companies to lower prices at the pump "now" as he announced new actions to try to reduce costs and spur competition.
The race for control of Congress is competitive six weeks from the midterms. Check out our latest race ratings.
Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman, center, appears with brothers Lee, right, and Dennis Horton in Philadelphia on Sept. 24, 2022.
The fundamentals of candidate quality, opposition research and polling appear to be helping Democrats in the fight for the Senate.
Approving a large construction project through Congress, as Sen. Joe Manchin is trying to do, is highly unusual, experts say.
It will enlist private organizations and everyday Americans, similar to efforts undertaken in the past year for Afghans and Ukrainians.
A year-end package is being eyed to fix a provision that many say unfairly cuts benefits for public employees who have government pensions.
Republicans traveled to Pennsylvania to unveil their “Commitment to America” and to refocus their message for November’s midterm elections.
He brought his math Ph.D. (and his solar system tie) to the House. Now Rep. Jerry McNerney is planning his next AI chapter.
Hits and Misses highlights this week include Rep. Garret Graves poster-sizing his points to the House Natural Resources Committee and more.
Photos of the week: Congress was in session this week with government funding set to expire soon and the midterms rapidly approaching.
Republicans make clear they know the Trump-McConnell feud is coming to a boil.
What Republican governors DeSantis and Abbott are doing to migrants recalls the “Reverse Freedom Rides” of the 1960s.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is on track to process the most employment-based green cards in the history of the program.
The four bills, involving nearly $2 billion in grant programs, received varying levels of bipartisan support
Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer took the first preliminary step Thursday toward considering stopgap funding legislation.
The reauthorization is expected to hitch a ride on the short-term government funding bill Congress is expected to take up next week.
States represented by top Senate appropriators received a disproportionately high amount of earmarked dollars.
Officials and experts in Washington and Taipei are debating whether America's "strategic ambiguity" toward Taiwan needs to end.