Heard On The Hill · 119th Congress
The Capitol is hard to navigate. Does it have to be?
A new proposal to improve wayfinding includes turn-by-turn directions and digital signs.
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A new proposal to improve wayfinding includes turn-by-turn directions and digital signs.
Rep. Kat Cammack and her 4-month-old daughter, Augusta Dair, leave a meeting of the House Republican Conference in the Capitol on Wednesday.
"It looks like a small issue ... but our emissaries to the world are Elvis and Frank Sinatra," the KISS bassist said.
For Gehry, the Eisenhower Memorial is his most enduring legacy in the nation’s capital, a place frequently at the center of architectural debates.
The top of the Washington Monument peeks above a fog bank over the Washington area at sunrise on Sunday morning.
With America’s semiquincentennial approaching, history was a hot topic this year, along with naval strategy, fabulist noir and reflections on going home.
A suspect was arrested in a pipe bomb case, a new member was sworn in on a pink Bible, and the Capitol gingerbread house got a sugar coating.
Adm. Frank M. Bradley, center, arrives in the Capitol Visitor Center on Thursday to brief Senate Armed Services Committee members.
Jared Isaacman, left, nominee to head the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, talks with Bill Nye, "the Science Guy" on Wednesday.
After an influx of money for new security programs, members still describe fears and tough conversations with their families.
California Rep. Salud Carbajal, left, tries his hand at decorating this year’s Capitol gingerbread house in the Cannon basement on Tuesday.
The AP’s Darlene Superville is pictured in the White House’s Red Room during an advance tour of first lady Melania Trump’s 2025 Christmas decorations.
The annual gingerbread replica of the Capiol is back, complete with pounds and pounds of sugar. Everything is edible — but just look, don’t bite.
Photos of the week | November 14-20, 2025 - Uncategorized Photos of the week: Epstein files, return of the tourists, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman visit and an annual Thanksgiving lunch highlight this week's photos. Here are the images captured by CQ Roll Call photojournalists.
Hill staffers wait in a long line in the Dirksen Senate Office Building’s cafeteria on Thursday for the popular annual Thanksgiving lunch.
For Russ Fulcher, a week in mock government made a world of difference. "It was a life-changer for me," the Idaho Republican says.
One political scientist shares insights from his research. "About 15 percent of sections can’t be traced to any other previously introduced bill," he says.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman walk through the Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Wednesday.
Snipers are posted on the roof of the Capitol on Tuesday during a news conference with survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Women assembled at the Capitol with pictures of themselves as children to share their stories of abuse and being "left behind in the reckoning."