Congress · 117th Congress
Semiconductor, science bill passes Senate, heads to House
A bill to bolster chip manufacturing and scientific research won Senate approval, setting Congress up to clear it by week's end.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
A bill to bolster chip manufacturing and scientific research won Senate approval, setting Congress up to clear it by week's end.
Simply put, weasel words don’t work. Neither does bad economic policy, no matter how many complicit economists you dig up.
An effort to give millions of veterans easier access to health and disability benefits suffered another surprising setback Wednesday.
Bosses used to tell Hill aides, “If I ever see your name in the newspapers, it better be in the obituaries … or it will be.”
Lawmakers say government purchases of data from private companies violates the Fourth Amendment and are looking to close the gap.
House Financial Services ranking member Patrick T. McHenry, a likely chair if Republicans retake the House, is racking up donations.
“We refuse to watch politicians literally play games while the world burns,” said an organizer with climate group Now or Never.
There are a few tweets that Sen. Brian Schatz wishes he could take back, but that’s the way it goes on social media.
Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer leaves the Radio/TV Gallery studio in the Capitol on Tuesday after a news conference.
An economic competitiveness package meant to boost semiconductor manufacturing and scientific research is on track to pass the Senate.
A handful of senators said they wouldn’t support a semiconductors incentive bill unless it also included science provisions.
Ahead of Trump’s first speech in the capital since leaving office, McCarthy said the GOP will start rolling out its agenda on Wednesday.
Either the bill passes this year or else the 2024 election will be conducted under the same murky rules that Trump tried so hard to exploit.
Incentives for clean energy and research and development could move as part of a year-end tax bill when the dust settles after the midterms
Stephen Buyer, a former nine-term congressman from Indiana, was accused of using insider information to make more than $300,000.
The Washington Monument is seen through the columns of the Lincoln Memorial at sunrise on Monday, July 25.
House and Senate leaders are looking to pass a long list of items in a short time before taking their annual August break.
Countries with high rates of gun violence and problematic human rights records are among the top destinations for U.S. firearms.
Democrats say expanded school eligibility is needed to feed more children in communities with high poverty rates.
A jury found Steve Bannon guilty on two criminal charges of contempt of Congress for his refusal to cooperate with the House Jan. 6 panel.