Congress · 116th Congress
Familiar offsets could resurface in spending caps talks
[jwp-video n=”1″] Smaller ambitions?
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Smaller ambitions?
[jwp-video n=”1″]
[jwp-video n=”1″]
[jwp-video n=”1″] In talking with Republicans before the game, it was clear their number one goal was stopping the buzzsaw that is Richmond.
Trump, speaking to the pool of reporters outside the White House before boarding Marine 1, said he spoke with Pelosi, but he also seemed to side with the Senate bill.
[jwp-video n=”1″] A low bar Setting minimal expectations for the president’s meetings with foreign leaders on major topics has become commonplace for his aides, and in a Monday evening conference
Below-radar issue Former President Barack Obama’s administration had backed a roughly $1 trillion plan to replace, update or modify the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
[Democrats weave climate messages into spending bills] [jwp-video n=”1″] The situation was “still in a holding pattern,” Courtney spokeswoman Carol Currie said Wednesday.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Nearly every candidate entered the race earlier this year to questions of whether they support “Medicare for All,” which is typically considered a single-payer health care system
[jwp-video n=”1″] “It’s obvious that he feels the need to shut the Senate down in effect for a couple of days in order to accommodate all the members of his conference who are running for president
[jwp-video n=”1″] Where the voters are Our April Winning the Issues survey found that, overall, when asked to describe how they felt about the current state of politics and issues in the country
[jwp-video n=”1″]
The bill would set a target of supporting at least 1 million federal service jobs a year within 10 years and raise the living stipend of those in AmeriCorps.
On a mostly party-line vote of 227-194, the House passed the Democrat-written measure that combines five of the 12 annual bills needed for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1.
#BeBest — Melania Trump (@FLOTUS) June 25, 2019var rcrdTwitter = 1; The timing of the announcement was curious.
[jwp-video n=”1″]
The Senate is scheduled to be in session on Aug. 1, meaning the 9/11 fund legislation could be among the last votes before recess, unless there is a decision to once again truncate the scheduled five-week
[jwp-video n=”1″] Each Democrat will have his or her own reasons for thinking this hopeful or that one is most “electable.”
They worry Congress will run out of time before California’s Consumer Privacy Act kicks in Jan. 1. “All I can tell you is we’ve got to do one, but I don’t have anything to say” beyond that, Rep.
There’s just one problem: It’s not fully clear that President Donald Trump would sign the bipartisan measure, which was approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee on a 30-1 vote last Wednesday