Policy · 118th Congress
Investors focus ESG on contrast between climate words and actions
Investors say they will ramp up their scrutiny of companies to make sure their ESG actions are in line with words.
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Investors say they will ramp up their scrutiny of companies to make sure their ESG actions are in line with words.
Educators may want to challenge Florida's 'Stop Woke Act,' but it’s difficult to fight something that's so hard to pin down
The 118th Congress is the most diverse in history, with a quarter of members identifying as nonwhite. But disparities persist for staff.
The seven states in the Colorado River basin are meeting over the next few days to draft proposals for managing water levels amid a drought.
“There was a lot of manual labor involved with being a press secretary back then,” says the longtime aide to Sen. Patrick Leahy.
Moves by the Biden administration to expand access to a drug first approved in 2000 have spawned multiple lawsuits.
She broke precedent for the Jan. 6 select committee, and now Democrats are seeing what that means for their Intelligence picks.
The House is expected to consider legislation that would limit sales from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
House Republicans are mulling an attempt to buy time for further negotiations on federal spending and deficits.
Senate Republicans denied newly elected Sen. Eric Schmitt of Missouri a waiver to serve on the Judiciary Committee.
The caucus is composed largely of members from the Great Lakes region seeking to remind their party leaders they are “not fly-over country.”
The White House has directed the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission to examine the housing rental market.
President Joe Biden's decision to provide M1 Abrams tanks to Kyiv comes as Germany agrees to send its Leopard 2 tanks.
Sen. Joe Manchin III and the auto industry are pushing for diverging interpretations of tax breaks in Democrats’ 2022 climate package.
The panel's new chairman wants an “after-action review” but also plans work on the origins of the coronavirus.
The number of competitive House seats was higher than average last year, but could drop in 2024 if the pattern of 2004 and 2014 holds.
Border agents have reported a dramatic drop in encounters with migrants from Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Haiti in recent weeks.
Google spent $10.9 million on lobbying last year, included work on antitrust issues, the subject of a Justice Department lawsuit this week.
A group of 20 Republican-led states sued Tuesday to strike down a recent government program to address migration at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Organizing resolutions needed to constitute each party’s membership on Senate committees may still get votes this week, despite GOP holdup.