Congress · 117th Congress
Senate appropriators warn of year-end train wreck
Senate appropriators have a lot to do with little time to do it when it comes to wrapping up spending bills for the next fiscal year.
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Senate appropriators have a lot to do with little time to do it when it comes to wrapping up spending bills for the next fiscal year.
Two senators are working on an amendment to address concerns about proposed new reporting rules for cryptocurrency transactions.
Individual senators’ holds on bipartisan amendments slowed debate on a nearly $1 trillion infrastructure bill Tuesday.
The Senate sent legislation to President Joe Biden for his signature to award Capitol Police and Metro PD with congressional gold medals.
The Senate is on track to pass an infrastructure bill soon, but Congress did not extend a moratorium on evictions that has expired.
Sen. Lindsey Graham announced he would self-quarantine for 10 days Monday after revealing a positive COVID-19 test.
The White House is facing pressure from congressional Democrats to extend an eviction moratorium, but says it can't act unilaterally.
Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer said he expects the long-awaited bipartisan infrastructure bill to pass later this week.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s plan to link a $550 billion bipartisan infrastructure bill to a $3.5 trillion budget is starting to backfire.
ANALYSIS — With the death of Mike Enzi, the Senate lost one of its great advocates for expanding the use of technology on the floor.
The Senate voted 47-34 along party lines to confirm Ur Jaddou as US Citizenship and Immigration Services director.
DOJ told the Treasury Department it must turn over former President Donald Trump’s tax returns to the House Ways and Means Committee.
A procedural vote on the infrastructure bill kicked off what is likely to be a contentious debate that could stretch through the weekend.
The deal's negotiators had no sooner convened a celebratory news conference when the questions came rolling in.
Both approaches would add billions of dollars to federal spending, and both would fall short of solving the affordable housing problem.
The bill would shore up Capitol safety, reimburse the National Guard and relocate Afghans who helped the U.S. government during the war.
The heavy United States reliance on the internet also makes the nation more vulnerable, says Rhode Island Democratic Rep. Jim Langevin.
With their party in control of Congress and the White House, Democrats are in demand on K Street but not eager to leave federal jobs.
Concerns about new restrictions on federal grants for police departments could derail House consideration of the measure.
Modernizing the Capitol is both “hard” and a “no-brainer,” say members of the bipartisan committee as they decide on new recommendations.