Congress · 119th Congress
EPA’s end to endangerment finding eases rules for carmakers
The EPA's decision will have immediate impacts on vehicle tailpipe emissions limits and start-stop technology incentives.
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The EPA's decision will have immediate impacts on vehicle tailpipe emissions limits and start-stop technology incentives.
One year into his term, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s focus on autism is polarizing Capitol Hill Republicans.
Congressional earmarks returned with a vengeance in fiscal 2026, with familiar faces topping the rankings in each chamber.
​The House Agriculture Committee unveiled a five-year farm bill that could divide members across regional lines as much as political ones.
The Trump administration has proposed a new set of cargo taxes on goods entering the United States.
New York Rep. Nicole Malliotakis asked the Supreme Court on Friday to stop a state court order to redraw her district ahead of the midterms.
President Trump uncharacteristically spent much of the week behind closed doors and appeared subdued in public.
Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy urged action on recommendations prompted by the January 2025 crash at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Leaders of both chambers told members they would be given 48 hours notice to return to the Capitol if a deal is reached.
City officials questioned Republicans’ timing and warned the move could disrupt tax season and blow a hole in D.C.’s budget.
Senators reached agreement on a bill that would speed satellite licensing by the FCC, with additional checks to address Democratic concerns.
For the first time, a press gallery on Capitol Hill is named after a journalist: the abolitionist Frederick Douglass.
Lawmakers made no apparent progress toward a deal Wednesday on an extension of Department of Homeland Security funding.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi showed little regret at a House hearing Wednesday for the DOJ's controversial handling of the Epstein files.
After weeks of pressure from rank-and-file Republicans, the House on Wednesday passed a bill aimed at creating a federal voter ID mandate.
Democratic lawmakers targeted by the Justice Department over a video directed at servicemembers consider their own legal action.
Republicans and Democrats sparred about the potential real-world harms of a partial shutdown for the Department of Homeland Security.
Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle came down hard on various sectors of the U.S. prescription drug supply during a hearing on Wednesday.
Republicans are weighing how far to take their election-year push on voter ID — and whether to tighten federal control over elections in the first place.
Sen. Charles E. Schumer, left, consoles Sky Roberts, brother of Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre, in the Capitol on Tuesday.