Congress · 118th Congress
House pandemic bill raises debate about future of border restrictions
Republicans voted to end the COVID-19 health emergency, but the White House says that move would also halt Title 42, which the GOP supports.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Republicans voted to end the COVID-19 health emergency, but the White House says that move would also halt Title 42, which the GOP supports.
Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes will succeed the ousted Rep. Adam B. Schiff of California as ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee.
Some members of the House Natural Resources Committee could be packing heat when they gather in the new session of Congress.
House advocates worry that House GOP comments about cutting spending will hit key programs just as rents are rising.
Groups battling on both dies of the gun rights debate reported lower lobbying expenditures in 2022, disclosures filed with Congress show.
Rep. Lucas, the House Science chair, says success with funding for semiconductors could mean big investments for AI, quantum computing.
In one of his first moves as chairman, Comer renamed Oversight’s five subcommittees, saying it would help jump-start his investigations.
New York Rep. Andrew Garbarino, whose Long Island district abuts that of embattled Rep. George Santos, will serve on the panel.
Rep. George Santos told House Republicans during their weekly conference meeting Tuesday that he won't serve on any committees.
Rep. Spanberger says party leaders, who won by an average of 33 percentage points in 2022, need to hear from swing-district Democrats.
Video of the beating of Tyre Nichols at the hands of police officers renewed calls for Congress to address law enforcement violence.
Senate Republicans are voicing concerns about how their House colleagues are conducting investigations of the Biden family.
The House approved a bill that would tie nonemergency use of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to fossil fuel development on public lands.
Republican Sen. John Cornyn put the blame Thursday on the White House — and not his office — for delays in filling federal judgeships in Texas.
PBMs argue that the rebates they collect from drug companies in exchange for coverage by a health plan are used to lower premiums.
“We have to be smart about it,” says the freshman congressman from New Mexico, who once worked for Democratic Sen. Martin Heinrich.
Senators from both sides of the aisle discussed their search for a path forward to resuscitate bipartisan immigration efforts.
The Senate approved one nominee and designated January “Stalking Awareness Month,” but an organizing resolution has been delayed.
Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, his party's Senate campaign chief, will serve on the Appropriations Committee this Congress.
The 118th Congress is the most diverse in history, with a quarter of members identifying as nonwhite. But disparities persist for staff.