Congress · 117th Congress
Deja vu permeates as lawmakers ready to debate Iran nuclear deal
The Biden administration is close to striking an agreement with Iran, and lobbying machinery is cranking back into action on Capitol Hill.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
The Biden administration is close to striking an agreement with Iran, and lobbying machinery is cranking back into action on Capitol Hill.
Members and experts doubted the effectiveness and practicality of placing lawmaker assets in a qualified blind trust.
The Senate voted unanimously Thursday to pass a bill to remove Russia's favorable trade status and to enact an energy embargo.
Democrats marked Ketanji Brown Jackson's confirmation to the Supreme Court with smiles, tears and cheers.
Senators pressed Defense Department leaders to send more weapons to Ukraine more quickly, with the goal of defeating Russia.
The House passed a $55 billion package of aid to restaurants, food trucks, bars, caterers, brewpubs, bakeries and pandemic-ravaged industries.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi has become the latest high-ranking official in Washington to test positive for COVID-19.
After another contentious confirmation process, she will be the first Black woman and former public defender on the high court.
Generals and admirals have written to Congress asking for billions in funding that President Joe Biden did not request.
“We still are woefully and dangerously unprepared,” advocates say, pushing lawmakers to act with more urgency.
Six-term Rep. Bob Gibbs dropped his reelection bid a month before the primary, calling the state court battle over district maps a "circus."
The House voted to hold in contempt two former Trump aides who are refusing to cooperate with the panel investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
To win Republican support, Senate negotiators promised that a bipartisan COVID-19 aid package would be fully paid for.
As the Senate prepares to vote on an insulin pricing bill as early as this month, advocates and some lawmakers try to expand its reach.
A bipartisan $10 billion COVID-19 supplemental is stuck in the Senate amid a dispute over a tangential pandemic-related border control policy.
Prospects for getting a bipartisan supplemental pandemic aid package to President Biden's desk before a two-week recess seem remote.
The House plans to vote this week on a $55 billion aid package for restaurants and other hard-hit businesses, but Senate action will wait.
A former chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, Upton faced a primary against a fellow Republican because of redistricting.
Transit operators and unions say they’ve seen a spike in violence against transit workers since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
President Obama returned to the White House Tuesday to celebrate the Affordable Care Act with his former vice president, Joe Biden.