Congress · 119th Congress
Lawmakers’ concerns grow about Americans left stranded in Mideast
Kim said up to 1 million Americans may potentially be in harm's way.Â
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Kim said up to 1 million Americans may potentially be in harm's way.Â
He flipped a Democratic seat in 2024 by less than 1 percentage point, winning with about 49 percent of the vote.
The department also plans to issue $1 billion to specialty crop farmers, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in December.
obligations for these costs would ordinarily be recorded against the Department's annual appropriations, the Department can adjust its accounting ledgers so that they are properly recorded against H.R. 1
the new year — and in the … first two quarters, where you're going to have some opportunity for legislation," the senior official said, adding that funding the government past Jan. 30 remained the No. 1
↵↵The Senate's fiscal 2026 Interior-Environment Appropriations bill would keep the same funding level of $1 million for the program, while the House (HR 4754) would increase it to $2.5 million.
↵↵"There are still some conversations with some states engaging in possibly some chip technology, but considering what just happened with HR 1, some states are reconsidering if that's the right path,"
↵↵"Jan. 1 is coming. Republicans are responsible for what happens next."
↵↵"We're focused on No. 1, getting this vote and waiting," she said. "We've been waiting. They said after the shutdown, they would come to us with serious proposals." ↵↵Sen.
↵↵The potential for the military budget to meet or exceed $1 trillion in fiscal 2026 has defense hawks pleased, even if the authorized level does not meet the $924.7 billion that the Senate had endorsed
↵↵Trump smiled wide when Prince Mohammed, who is also known by his initials MBS, said he would "definitely" increase a planned $600 billion investment in the United States to $1 trillion.
↵↵After finally bringing a 43-day partial government shutdown to an end, Senate leaders were eager to get going on long-delayed appropriations work for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1.
Congress flouted several legal principles with an unusual provision creating a streamlined path only for senators to file lawsuits and collect at least $1 million each for government actions in the previous
↵↵But the push to ban members from owning or trading stocks, which goes back years and seemingly had been picking up momentum, was derailed by the shutdown that began on Oct. 1.
↵↵Leaders of both parties have yet to agree on topline discretionary spending limits for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, a critical step for passing most of the annual appropriations bills that remain
↵↵The president has been purposely detached from negotiations among rank-and-file Republican and Democratic senators since before the shutdown began on Oct. 1.
↵↵For instance, at the start of the shutdown, six Head Start recipients with Oct. 1 start dates went without further federal funding — but that figure jumped to 140 on Monday, according to the National
That compares to already slowing growth in 2022, when the economy expanded by an inflation-adjusted 1 percent, down sharply from the previous year coming out of the pandemic-induced downturn.
President Barack Obama met with House Republicans on June 1 to discuss the budget and debt limit, and he played golf with Boehner later in the month.
far-right Republicans will renew calls made during the Trump administration to pass deep cuts to foreign aid spending, which despite popular belief among some conservatives, only amounts to less than 1