Congress · 117th Congress
Capitol Police prepare for Sept. 18 rally, lawmakers invited
The Capitol Police department is preparing for the possibility of violence at a protest that members of Congress have been invited to attend.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
The Capitol Police department is preparing for the possibility of violence at a protest that members of Congress have been invited to attend.
Capt. Sean Patton remembers a hectic time as the department was closing streets around the office buildings and the Capitol.
There's little time for Congress and the White House to negotiate a deal on the debt limit that can clear both chambers in the coming weeks.
Capitol Police are monitoring increasingly violent discussions among far-right groups in connection to a Sept. 18 rally in Washington, D.C.
Two veteran Capitol Hill staffers recall their experience on 9/11, including opening up their homes to their colleagues that day.
The House Ethics Committee announced it was opening probes into four members of Congress: three Republicans and one Democrat.
Two Afghanistan trips by House members as U.S. military forces withdrew from the country ended safely. That's not always the case.
Democratic leaders in the Senate need 10 Republicans to get out of their debt limit jam, and a desire for disaster relief might be the ticket.
The administration is seeking roughly $24 billion for disaster relief and $6.4 billion to support relocating tens of thousands of Afghans.
Some lawmakers want banks, oil and gas companies, tech providers, utilities and others to notify a top cybersecurity agency after an attack.
Progressives want infrastructure, reconciliation bills linked to ensure moderates don’t sink or water down the latter. A clash seems certain.
Taxes on executive pay and stock buybacks are among options senators are considering to cover costs of $3.5 trillion reconciliation package.
Democrats should “hit the pause button” on their $3.5 trillion reconciliation package, according to West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III.
The White House and Democrats in Congress have begun what could be a long response to addressing a Texas anti-abortion law.
The debate over military extremism is expected to be fierce at the House Armed Services markup of the fiscal 2022 NDAA.
The Capitol Police inspector general has found widespread deficiencies in the department’s Command and Coordination Bureau.
After Supreme Court allows Texas ban to take effect, Democrats say abortion is ‘on the ballot’ in next year’s Senate contests.
U.S. lawmakers must answer a long list of questions about aid to Afghanistan after the Taliban's return to power and the war's end.
The measure would set money aside for Americans evacuated from Afghanistan after the U.S. troop pullout, which was completed Monday.
After 9/11, leaders of both parties prayed together on the Capitol steps, and Bill Clinton said people should be supporting George W. Bush.