Congress · 118th Congress
Capitol Lens | Statue debut
Utah Highway Patrol troopers pose next to the new statue of Martha Hughes Cannon after the unveiling ceremony in the Capitol on Wednesday.
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Utah Highway Patrol troopers pose next to the new statue of Martha Hughes Cannon after the unveiling ceremony in the Capitol on Wednesday.
For the most part, candidates who decided to try, try again in 2024 after losing in 2022 simply lost, lost again.
House races are still being called, but some semblance of what happened and why is starting to come into focus.
We know Donald Trump is poised to return to the White House with a Republican-held Senate, but control of the House is still unclear.
Rep. Randy Feenstra, right, jokingly puts a finger in a vise at the Southeast Michigan Construction Academy in Madison Heights on Tuesday.
New Jersey Sens. George Helmy, left, and Cory Booker embrace in the Capitol on Monday. Helmy was sworn in to the Senate on Monday.
President Biden will tout his “decisive action” on the economy during his State of the Union address, a White House official said.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein died Thursday night, Sept. 28, 2023, at the age of 90. Here are photos from her long tenure on Capitol Hill.
Democratic Rep. Jared Golden of Maine runs by a PETA exhibit by artist Quill Hyde on the National Mall on Monday.
The Supreme Court appeared reluctant Tuesday to get ahead of Congress on a 1996 law on immunity for internet companies.
Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee is running for the Senate in California, where two fellow Democrats have already announced.
Democratic Rep. David Cicilline announced he’s leaving Congress effective June 1 to become president of the Rhode Island Foundation.
As the Senate fights over an FCC nominee, the government is gearing up to allocate billions of dollars to close a gap in broadband access.
Lawmakers and others are worried about easing sanctions on Syria after a devastating earthquake, fearing abuse of aid funding.
Lawmakers say the Pentagon’s new access to additional bases in the Philippines will boost its ability to deter Chinese aggression.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments next week in a pair of cases related to one of the central laws underpinning the modern internet.
UFO fever gripped Capitol Hill this week and CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists were there to capture all of the flying saucer furor, and more.
Washington, oddly, is not worried about the many risks of shooting down UFOs over the U.S. homeland. But one mistake would be catastrophic.
For days, Congress has been gripped by balloon fever, with symptoms including hot takes, gaseous emissions and alien hallucinations.
As the fight over transgender health care heats up, conservatives are drawing from the same playbook they used to fight access to abortion.