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Congress · 117th Congress

Pipeline’s backers have financial, campaign ties

The Equitrans PAC was first registered on Oct. 1, 2018, federal records show.   Manchin has received $10,000 from the same PAC, which also gave $7,500 to Sen. John Barrasso’s campaign.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Purity vs. pragmatism in key race for governor

Tim Pawlenty won reelection by 1 point (and with less than 47 percent of the vote). In 2020, Biden defeated President Donald Trump by 7 points.  

Congress · 117th Congress

Senate Judiciary Committee ties on Biden pick to lead ATF

Clarified 1:48 p.m. | The Senate Judiciary Committee deadlocked on President Joe Biden’s pick to be the nation’s top gun regulator Thursday amid a nascent effort to pass legislation following a wave of

Campaigns · 117th Congress

New debate over gun laws will test the gun lobby’s influence

By more than 3-to-1, gun rights groups — including the best-known National Rifle Association, which has filed for bankruptcy and may no longer be the political behemoth it once was — have outspent

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

21 photos that defined 2021 on Capitol Hill

As the clock struck midnight on Jan. 1, 2021, the world celebrated that 2020 was over and that things would finally get back to normal. 2021 proved much more challenging than most expected.

Congress · 117th Congress

Senate clears expedited debt limit process, Medicare cuts delay

The legislation heading to the White House also would delay Medicare cuts that would otherwise be triggered Jan. 1, including across-the-board reductions to provider reimbursements as well as separate

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

Fear not cheer: That’s the holiday spirit at the Capitol

Little political will exists in Congress to end the last-minute culture that many decry, especially the tradition of blowing past the Oct. 1 deadline to fund the government and instead setting up

Congress · 117th Congress

Some troops are driven to suicide by hunger, experts say

According to the Congressional Budget Office, the House version would help 2,500 more military families than the Senate’s bill, at a cost of $14 million, versus the $1 million Senate plan.