Senate FEC roundup: Cruz outraised, Brown bragging rights
Actor Hill Harper raised $1 million, including $463,000 in personal contributions and loans and $162,000 from donors giving less than $200. Harper had $418,000 on hand on Sept. 30.
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Actor Hill Harper raised $1 million, including $463,000 in personal contributions and loans and $162,000 from donors giving less than $200. Harper had $418,000 on hand on Sept. 30.
At the same time, it wasn’t clear their Senate counterparts would have any better luck when that chamber votes on cloture at 1 p.m. Saturday.
"Not only did Cardin have to step up in leadership in an unprecedented situation… he had to step up in the midst of this extremely high-stakes diplomacy that we had going on within the P5+1 and with Iran
After the last shutdown, estimates were upward of 1 million contractors, many of them lower-paid employees, never got paid for over one month of lost work.
That’s a nearly 2-to-1 negative image for what is the president’s reelection centerpiece.
It’s unclear if DeSantis — who reported more than $1 million in savings and checking accounts in his latest gubernatorial disclosure — simply forgot about the stocks or if he misspoke.
"On the 1/6 Committee, we uncovered proof that Donald Trump not only knew what was happening at the Capitol, but encouraged it. He is a cancer on our democracy. Today is the beginning of Justice.
"Keeping our democracy is more important than anything else because everything flows from it," Schumer continued, announcing the bills would be designated S 1, the highest legislative priority in the Senate
Long-awaited return DeLauro brought back earmarks in the last Congress after a decadelong absence with renewed transparency rules, limiting earmark funding to no more than 1 percent of the budget and requiring
According to a 2022 report by Moody’s, providing federally funded child care and paid leave to parents could boost the U.S. economy by as much as $1 trillion by 2028.
Yellen warned again Sunday that federal borrowing authority could run dry as early as June 1, leaving the government unable to pay all its bills.
"If these were staff meetings happening on Feb. 1, I’d call them productive," he said.
Uninsured deposits are held in a small share of accounts but can be a large proportion of banks’ funding, particularly among the largest 10 percent and largest 1 percent of banks by asset size, the agency
Yellen said Monday that the government may be unable to pay its bills on time as soon as June 1 — several senators said that leaves enough time to find agreement and brushed off any need for a short-term
"After reviewing recent federal tax receipts, our best estimate is that we will be unable to continue to satisfy all of the government’s obligations by early June, and potentially as early as June 1, if
Caps for the remainder of the decade would allow for 1 percent annual growth. Democrats may not agree with 1 percent but maybe they’d compromise around 2 percent, Rep. Don Bacon suggested.
He raised just $15,000 in the first three months of the year and had just shy of $1 million in his campaign account.
The measure would also cap spending for the remainder of the decade, allowing for 1 percent annual growth; appropriations wouldn’t return to the $1.6 trillion fiscal 2023 enacted level for a decade under
Two other Republicans, California’s Ken Calvert and Arizona freshman Juan Ciscomani, also raised more than $1 million during the quarter, with no loans.
That law, which goes into effect March 1, 2024, also requires tech companies to give parents access to teenagers’ accounts.Â