Congress · 117th Congress
Restaurants could get another $40B financial lifeline from Congress
A bipartisan Senate group is negotiating a bill to provide about $40 billion in fresh funding for pandemic-battered restaurants.
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A bipartisan Senate group is negotiating a bill to provide about $40 billion in fresh funding for pandemic-battered restaurants.
Declining water levels at the Glen Canyon hydroelectric dam, which provides power to western states, are close to the minimum needed.
New questions are emerging about how best to use COVID-19 tests amid a surge of breakthrough cases in vaccinated individuals.
Republicans pointed to big cost increases over the past year while Democrats focused on those price rises moderating in recent months.
The lease sale, which is set for Feb. 23, will cover 488,000 acres off the coasts of New York and New Jersey.
The White House stopped short of major changes to anticipated guidance surrounding masks and instead focused on changes to testing strategy.
House transportation spending chairman warns that the new infrastructure law could be held up without an agreement on fiscal 2022 spending.
Sen. Ted Cruz's effort to implement sanctions over the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is facing headwinds as Democrats get cold feet.
Uyghur Muslims are caught in a backlog of hundreds of thousands seeking asylum in the U.S. under a strained system.
Priorities laid out by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the biggest spender on federal lobbying, include support for immigration and trade.
The Democratic House majority leader expects President Joe Biden will seek spending for COVID-19 testing, vaccines and for schools.
Powell is expected to get another term as Fed chairman, but faces pressure over the central bank's moves to address pandemic economic stress.
5G wireless technology has created a strain on radio frequency spectrum that is putting the industry at odds with administration agencies.
Tax filing season will begin in two weeks as officials warned of backlogs and inability to meet demand for services.
Many of President Biden’s State Department nominees were blocked by Sen. Ted Cruz. After some dealing, some are getting to work.
Lawmakers have not required companies to report cyber attacks, leaving federal agencies in the dark about sensitive hacks.
Domestic greenhouse gas emissions rose by more than 6 percent in 2021 after a pandemic-driven decline in 2020, a research group reported.
Insurance plans will cover up to eight over-the-counter tests per consumer each month under a new directive.
Emergency rental assistance to tenants and landlords in November was the highest monthly amount to date, according to the Treasury Department.
ANALYSIS — The Fed is winding down its pandemic monetary policy on a faster timetable, which could address inflation fears.