Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress
Photos of the week ending Oct. 1, 2021
Photos of the week ending Oct. 1, 2021: Congress as seen by CQ Roll Call's photojournalists.
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Photos of the week ending Oct. 1, 2021: Congress as seen by CQ Roll Call's photojournalists.
bill, which would reauthorize surface transportation programs and includes $550 billion in new funding for roads, bridges, broadband and other infrastructure projects, up for a vote by midnight Oct. 1,
DeFazio’s bill to reauthorize spending for surface transportation, as well as drinking water and wastewater projects, passed the House on July 1, but Senate negotiators crafting the bipartisan infrastructure
Garamendi’s amendment would have also blocked funding for the W87-1 warhead, which is the warhead slotted to be deployed in the GBSD. The amendment was defeated on a 118-299 vote.
Biden wanted to start taxing gains on inherited assets above $1 million, or $2.5 million per couple factoring in the current tax exclusion for up to $500,000 in gains on a primary residence.
“It would have to be way under $1 trillion for me to get remotely interested,” he said. Hawaii Rep.
Biden is proposing to do that but allow a $1 million per person exemption, on top of the primary residence carve-out; there’s no specific exemption for farms, but Biden would let families that keep running
Rettig has estimated the “tax gap” — the difference between taxes owed and paid to the federal government — stands at $1 trillion each year, with a portion coming from unpaid taxes on cryptocurrency trades
target date holds, it would mean a vote on the infrastructure bill days before current surface transportation program authorizations are set to expire, as well as government-wide agency funding, on Oct. 1.
favor of a more modest measure, DeFazio was initially irate, vowing to vote against the infrastructure bill unless the Senate agreed to conference its version with his, which passed the House on July 1.
“We must pass the $1 trillion Senate physical infrastructure package immediately and send it to the President without changing it and without linking it to the $3.5 trillion social infrastructure
Colorado started its redistricting process earlier this summer, since it faces an Oct. 1 deadline to draw its new congressional and legislative boundaries.
Rettig has estimated that divide is about $1 trillion per year.
Various obstacles caused the Census Bureau to miss its original April 1 deadline to release local, detailed demographic data used for redistricting.
That proposal ultimately received $1 billion, a sum Osborne deemed insufficient.
With significantly less funding for climate programs than the White House requested in the Senate’s nearly $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, climate advocates are pinning their hopes on a budget
Rettig has estimated the difference between taxes owed and paid to the federal government is about $1 trillion per year.
Rettig has estimated that gap could be $1 trillion per year.
Rettig has estimated could be as much as $1 trillion each year including unpaid taxes on cryptocurrencies.
The bipartisan framework included $1 billion for that program.