Policy · 117th Congress
Immigrant investors on edge as EB-5 lapse enters eighth month
After the program sunsetted on July 1, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services put investors’ green card applications on hold.
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After the program sunsetted on July 1, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services put investors’ green card applications on hold.
Republicans and Democrats disagree on how best to address skyrocketing numbers of weapons being confiscated at airport security checkpoints.
Senate Democrats plan to bring legislation to the floor in March designed to cut costs for Americans as rampant inflation drives up prices.
The inspector general said a USDA office was slow to handle complaints of discrimination during the Trump administration.
Republican senators criticized the Pentagon for the amount of time and money it's dedicated to diversity and anti-extremism training.
Competing campaigns look to influence the debate over dramatically restricting coverage of a controversial treatment drug Aduhelm.
Republicans released their own Russia sanctions bill after Senate Democrats made a counteroffer on Monday, likely ending talks.
Six Republicans voted Tuesday to confirm FDA nominee Robert Califf, who had seen opposition from pockets of the Democratic caucus.
Countries like China, Russia and Iran operate talent recruitment programs to potentially steal U.S. technology, alarming U.S. officials.
The nominee to lead the FDA, Robert Califf, survived a Senate procedural vote Monday with the help of five Republicans.
Politically vulnerable House Democrats are anxious about the ongoing delay in finalizing fiscal 2022 spending bills.
The FDA postponed a Feb. 15 review of the Pfizer shots for young children ages 6 months to 4 years old, citing the need for more time.
Defense would see a $30 billion boost above Biden’s budget request, or $5 billion more than even the fiscal 2022 defense authorization law.
An executive order launches a plan to divide $7 billion in foreign reserves held in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The government can place its climate goals within closer reach if it bases its target on what happened in 2005 rather than subsequent years.
Programs approved in the bipartisan infrastructure law remain in a holding pattern until Congress can pass a spending bill.
Agriculture Secretary Vilsack named Shirley Sherrod to an equity panel over a decade after dismissing her, and then apologizing for doing so.
Republicans are ramping up complaints that the White House is injecting its agenda into implementing the bipartisan infrastructure law.
Some private insurers say the Democratic proposal could drive up costs and its language describing what counts as discrimination is too vague.
A fight over wages for restaurant workers is posing a new threat to a bipartisan effort to funnel additional federal aid to restaurants.