Campaigns · 117th Congress
In battleground Virginia district, Biden touts Spanberger work on health care
Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger flipped a GOP district in 2018, but her new district backed Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin last year.
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Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger flipped a GOP district in 2018, but her new district backed Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin last year.
The bill would let workers pursue sexual harassment and assault claims in public courts rather than forcing them into a confidential forum.
The government can place its climate goals within closer reach if it bases its target on what happened in 2005 rather than subsequent years.
Investors, regulators and lawmakers are scrutinizing companies' treatment of employees amid calls for more disclosure.
Programs approved in the bipartisan infrastructure law remain in a holding pattern until Congress can pass a spending bill.
Voter suppression and intimidation is increasingly finding its way into U.S. politics, as evidenced by recent GOP figures' actions, Mary C. Curtis writes.
Black and Latino candidates in some of the most high-profile races dominated the list of top fundraisers in 2022's fourth quarter.
Agriculture Secretary Vilsack named Shirley Sherrod to an equity panel over a decade after dismissing her, and then apologizing for doing so.
The CQ Roll Call newsroom tracks campaigns around the country, sharing the best stories, with some extras, in this At the Races newsletter.
With primaries quickly approaching, state courts are more likely the ones to decide how congressional district lines should be drawn.
Expected nomination of Black woman is likely to lead to more discussions about how to discuss race in America
The 2017 tax law changed the way businesses can write off R&D expenses. That could crimp innovation, Sharon Heck writes.
“This is, for Dems on the Hill, a ‘what side are you on?’ moment,” said one strategist, alluding to a pro-union song popularized by Pete Seeger.
Metro officials got tough questions about how the "nation's subway" may survive in an age with increased telework.
Republicans are ramping up complaints that the White House is injecting its agenda into implementing the bipartisan infrastructure law.
The NFL is more popular than ever, and this is despite fresh scrutiny on a litany of its organizational failures.
Some private insurers say the Democratic proposal could drive up costs and its language describing what counts as discrimination is too vague.
House and Senate Appropriations committee leaders said Wednesday they had a deal on a "framework" to start writing compromise spending bills.
“You’d need to talk to a labor lawyer who specializes in Congress, which I don’t think exists,” said one Hill-watcher.
A fight over wages for restaurant workers is posing a new threat to a bipartisan effort to funnel additional federal aid to restaurants.