Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

42 results for "1"

Filters: education White House Clear all

Policy · 119th Congress

Lawyers say new CDC policy may violate federal disability law

short-term situations allowing for up to 80 hours, or two weeks, of telework, Pamela Protzel Berman, deputy director for the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, told her staff in a Dec. 1

Congress · 119th Congress

White House isn’t giving up on AI regulations ban

Ted Cruz, R-Texas, acknowledged pressure from the White House for Congress to move on a moratorium, after Cruz's own moratorium provision was pulled out of the GOP's budget reconciliation bill on a 99-1

Congress · 119th Congress

Little sign of spending progress as top appropriators meet

But there is no sign of any bipartisan agreement on overall spending limits, a major impediment to moving a package that would well exceed $1 trillion and make up the bulk of the year's discretionary spending

Congress · 119th Congress

Trump draws line in sand on extending ACA credits

"Americans want Congress to extend the ACA tax credits to keep health insurance premiums from skyrocketing on January 1."

Congress · 119th Congress

Major spending package planned for Senate floor faces doubts

↵↵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 · 119th Congress

Trump signs spending bill to end longest government shutdown

↵↵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

Congress · 119th Congress

No quick fix for Head Start funding as programs start to close

↵↵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

Congress · 118th Congress

End of public health emergency causes cascade of changes

Those authorities run through Oct. 1, 2024, but because pharmacists operate largely under state laws, the intersection of federal and state policies will be unclear once the emergency expires in

Congress · 117th Congress

Stopgap funding bill set to dominate September agenda

Washington this month to wrestle with a White House request for $47.1 billion in emergency supplemental funds and the need to pass a stopgap spending bill to avoid a partial government shutdown starting Oct. 1.

Congress · 117th Congress

Biden meets robot dog, pitches innovation agenda

“The United States of America used to be ranked No. 1 in the world in investing in the future. Now we’re ranked No. 9, No. 9 in research and development,” he said.

Congress · 117th Congress

Obama and Biden reunite to tout signature health care law

The proposed rule would close the family glitch loophole beginning Jan. 1, 2023. Lawmakers and advocates have pushed the administration to act on the family glitch for some time.

Policy · 117th Congress

Hoyer: White House to ask for more pandemic relief funds

The current temporary funding law expires in less than six weeks, but Democrats and Republicans have yet to agree on how much to spend for the fiscal year that began on Oct. 1, let alone how to divvy

Policy · 117th Congress

Biden extends student loan repayment pause

President Joe Biden announced Wednesday a 90-day extension of the pause on repayments for federal student loans to May 1, even as congressional Democrats seek further action.

Policy · 117th Congress

Biden calls for patriotic unity, pitches plan to fight omicron

“We are better positioned than we were a year ago to fight COVID-19,” Biden said, noting that last Christmas fewer than 1 percent of adults were fully vaccinated, while now over 71 percent of adults

Congress · 117th Congress

Biden makes $1.75T sales pitch to House Democrats

An additional $125 billion would come from a 1 percent surcharge that would be levied on corporations when they buy back shares of their own stock.