Congress · 119th Congress
Senate measure would support limits on AI chip sales to China
Senators on both sides of the aisle on Thursday signed onto a call to keep advanced artificial intelligence chips from being sold to China.
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Senators on both sides of the aisle on Thursday signed onto a call to keep advanced artificial intelligence chips from being sold to China.
Airports impacted by the cuts will be announced Thursday and those affected will be in locations that feel the most pressure on controllers.
California's redistricting turned Republican Ken Calvert's seat blue, so he'll run in an adjoining district held by GOP incumbent Young Kim.
Democrats say administration hasn't responded to requests for information about U.S. citizens detained in its immigration enforcement push.
The Supreme Court appeared skeptical during oral arguments Wednesday of President Donald Trump’s worldwide tariff regime.
An aging nuclear power workforce and shortage of qualified employees could pose a challenge to Trump's goals for a "nuclear renaissance."
Low-income families began taking a hit this week, as advocates warn preschools are having to close as a casualty of the government shutdown.
The Supreme Court appeared reluctant Tuesday to get ahead of Congress on a 1996 law on immunity for internet companies.
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 Biden administration said it would welcome congressional action on safety measures for trains carrying highly hazardous materials.
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.
Labor Secretary Marty Walsh touted the department's achievements during his tenure as he told staff he would leave in mid-March.
As the fight over transgender health care heats up, conservatives are drawing from the same playbook they used to fight access to abortion.
Texas filed a federal lawsuit that seeks to wipe out the $1.7 trillion fiscal 2023 spending package over former House rules for proxy voting.
Congress is seeking legislative fixes to the scourge of military hunger, which is a persistent problem for the Pentagon.
The administration may soon allow a new oil and gas drilling project in Alaska, even as it aims to halve U.S. carbon emissions by 2030.
The federal government could run out of cash to pay all its bills sometime between July and September unless the debt limit is lifted.
Rep. Mary Peltola took over Alaska’s at-large congressional seat with promises of bipartisanship that will require precise needle threading.
Calling themselves “pragmatic conservatives,” the 70-member Republican Main Street Caucus hopes to influence policy coming out of the House.