Podcasts · 117th Congress
‘Deep summer’ fever in the Capitol - Roll Call
What is Deep Summer? Well, it is partly when Congress is desperately trying to leave town with its work piled up high.
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What is Deep Summer? Well, it is partly when Congress is desperately trying to leave town with its work piled up high.
Congress has the ability to address the issue in an upcoming Supreme Court case that could reshape federal elections, witnesses said Thursday.
Rep. Dean Phillips played softball, used the autopen and sweated through his suit when he worked for Sen. Patrick Leahy in the late 1980s.
The midterm elections and retirements mean some of the standout players in the annual Congressional Baseball Game won't be there next year.
Climate activists had promised to disrupt Thursday’s Congressional Baseball Game, but in the end it was pouring rain that delayed the action.
Republicans seize on a drop in GDP to slam Biden and Democrats, but Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen would not say there’s a recession.
The CQ Roll Call newsroom tracks campaigns nationwide, sharing the best stories, with some extras, in the At the Races newsletter.
Senate Republicans are backing bills that would instruct retirement plan advisers to use financial measures to choose investments.
Ads aimed at Latino voters in Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and Texas battleground districts use regional accents.
A budget deal that West Virginia Democrat and the Senate majority leader had been discussing is officially back on the table.
GOP Rep. Peter Meijer, who faces a Trump-backed opponent and tougher district this year, has a family-backed super PAC is helping him.
The narrowed bill will be open for amendment on virtually any topic it originally was set to address, such as climate, taxes and child care.
Lawmakers and dignitaries unveil the statue of Amelia Earhart in Statuary Hall in the Capitol on Wednesday, July 27, 2022.
A bill to bolster chip manufacturing and scientific research won Senate approval, setting Congress up to clear it by week's end.
Simply put, weasel words don’t work. Neither does bad economic policy, no matter how many complicit economists you dig up.
An effort to give millions of veterans easier access to health and disability benefits suffered another surprising setback Wednesday.
House Democratic leaders pulled back on planned votes this week on bills that include police grant funding and an assault weapons ban.
Bosses used to tell Hill aides, “If I ever see your name in the newspapers, it better be in the obituaries … or it will be.”
Lawmakers say government purchases of data from private companies violates the Fourth Amendment and are looking to close the gap.
House Financial Services ranking member Patrick T. McHenry, a likely chair if Republicans retake the House, is racking up donations.