This week: Senate returns with clock ticking toward shutdown
The Yom Kippur holiday begins at sundown on Oct. 1.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
The Yom Kippur holiday begins at sundown on Oct. 1.
tax credits can be negotiated later, Schumer said the matter is too urgent because insurance notices will be issued in October, with open enrollment for plans offered on the exchanges beginning Nov. 1.
[Shutdown pain may not be evenly spread as OMB readies hatchet] The Senate is back in session on Monday with 48 hours until agencies would have to start shutting down Oct. 1.
The White House is telling agencies to consider mass layoffs for positions that aren’t protected from a partial government shutdown, which is set to begin Oct. 1 if the two parties can’t come to a swift
While federal workers made up about 1 percent of Kansas’ adult workforce, that figure jumps to around 4 percent in blue-state bastions Maryland and Hawaii.
Still, that may not be enough to avoid a shutdown starting Oct. 1, given demands from Democrats’ left-leaning base to stand up to Trump no matter the cost.
"President Trump is right to support them and step in to provide a bridge to the enhanced farm safety net policies in HR 1, which will kick in next year," he said referring to the bill that became the
The money will go toward a field effort to reach 1 million voters in both states through digital ads, mail and an early vote campaign.Â
Shutdown countdown Scratching the meeting increases the likelihood that a partial shutdown will be triggered when the new fiscal year begins on Oct. 1.
President Donald Trump’s budget office plans to advise federal program managers to fire employees whose paychecks are financed by annual appropriations if a partial government shutdown begins Oct. 1, rather
Scratching the meeting increases the likelihood that a partial shutdown will be triggered when the new fiscal year begins on Oct. 1.
government funding impasse, White House and Capitol Hill officials said Monday, after lawmakers left Capitol Hill for a week on Friday with little movement toward averting a partial shutdown starting Oct. 1.
be too late to prevent steep premium increases for millions of individuals with coverage purchased on federal and state exchanges, with insurers already setting rates and open enrollment starting Nov. 1.
be too late to prevent steep premium increases for millions of individuals with coverage purchased on federal and state exchanges, with insurers already setting rates and open enrollment starting Nov. 1.
Open enrollment for the exchanges begins Nov. 1, and premium rates are already being set.
If a permanent extension were enacted after the start of open enrollment on Nov. 1, CBO predicts premiums for 2026 won’t be adjusted downward at all.
Open enrollment starts Nov. 1, and the CBO said Thursday that if subsidies aren’t extended by Sept. 30 it will result in fewer individuals signing up for coverage.
It would also repeal health care-related changes made by Republicans’ "big, beautiful" reconciliation law, including around $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid and other programs over a decade.
Today, more than 1,500 health centers operate across 17,000 locations nationwide, providing care to nearly 34 million people—roughly 1 in every 10 Americans.
In our recent Winning the Issues Survey (8/30–9/1, 1,000 registered voters), we found that overall, only 33 percent believe the BBB would prevent a tax increase on themselves and their families, while