Opinion · 116th Congress
Pandemics change, but Congress stays the same
In 1968, a deadly flu killed 1 million worldwide and about 100,000 Americans, including Rep. Robert Everett, D-Tenn.
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In 1968, a deadly flu killed 1 million worldwide and about 100,000 Americans, including Rep. Robert Everett, D-Tenn.
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[jwp-video n=”1″] There was little sympathy for health care workers or those standing at fast-moving lines at the meat processing plants that have become virus hot spots.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi says cities and states will need more help soon, and even $1 trillion might not cover the cost.
These anti-rural, anti-trucker, anti-RV provisions are scheduled to go into effect on June 1.
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Recently, by a 2-1 vote, a three-judge federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., sided with Trump, ruling that Congress didn’t even have the right to ask a court to enforce its subpoena.
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1. All internet voting systems and technologies (including email, fax, web-based voting and voting via mobile apps) are currently inherently insecure.
Here are five things Congress should do right now to protect federal employees and the communities they serve: 1.
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All told, it’s as many as 1 in 8 nursing jobs that hospitals won’t be able to fill.
[jwp-video n=”1″] An executive exception So where is the American president?
It makes sense when your economy is nose-diving to spend some money that can be borrowed at under 1 percent.”
[jwp-video n=”1″] There is a better way, and we should use the coronavirus crisis to put it in place, before we become complacent yet again.