Capitol Ink · 116th Congress
Capitol Ink | Best of 2020: Congress
Nobody found a thrill on “Coronavirus Hill,” from April 1, which depicted the isolation the country was feeling from being shut down.
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Nobody found a thrill on “Coronavirus Hill,” from April 1, which depicted the isolation the country was feeling from being shut down.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Loeffler appeared open to supporting the $2,000 checks, but added a caveat.
This year, Biden won Georgia by less than half of 1 percent.
Below is a roundup of the two dozen outside groups that have each spent $1 million or more since Nov. 3.
(Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call) APRIL 1: Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., reminds photographers to practice social distancing after her television interview in the Russell Senate Office Building.
Hey, big spenders: Outside groups in both parties are dropping millions of dollars on the Georgia runoffs, and Republicans are outspending Democrats 2-to-1.
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Congress did not reach an agreement to reauthorize the highway bill in time for the Oct. 1 deadline, opting to extend the current law through most of 2021.
The pandemic-battered transportation industry would get $45 billion, including $15 billion for airlines, $14 billion for mass transit, $10 billion for state highways and $1 billion for Amtrak.
[jwp-video n=”1″] The inaugural committee accepts individual contributions up to $500,000 and corporate donations up to $1 million, according to an official with the presidential inaugural committee
[jwp-video n=”1″] Sen.
Lawmakers will convene in the House chamber at precisely 1 p.m., as prescribed by federal law, with the vice president presiding.
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[jwp-video n=”1″] Perdue and Loeffler have yet to acknowledge his victory, but they have nevertheless stuck to the message that they are the last line of defense against Demcocratic majority
Phillips, senior adviser for Americans for Prosperity Action, a conservative group that’s spending $12 million on turnout efforts in Georgia, with more than 200 staffers on the ground and plans to knock on 1
Joe Biden finished ahead of Trump by less than one half of 1 percent, 49.5 percent to 49.3 percent. In the regular Senate election, GOP Sen.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Known as the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici Program — for former Sens.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Barrasso added: “Don’t expect Senate Republicans to forget how the Democrats treated Mr. Trump’s nominees.”
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