Heard On The Hill · 119th Congress
Photos of the week | January 9-15, 2026
Chick painting, Clinton no-shows, Minneapolis, and Greenland highlight this week's photos of the week by CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists.
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Chick painting, Clinton no-shows, Minneapolis, and Greenland highlight this week's photos of the week by CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists.
↵↵As filing deadlines for the 2026 elections approach in more and more states, it's not just current members who could be deterred but would-be candidates eyeing their first bids for office as well.
(Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., speaks about the 2026 Congressional calendar during a news conference with House Republican leadership in the Capitol Visitor Center
↵↵Congress hasn't yet agreed on fiscal 2026 appropriations for the agency.
The Trump administration wants at least three advanced modular reactors to reach criticality by July 4, 2026 — a goal industry insiders have called ambitious.Â
Last week, appropriators approved on a party-line vote a fiscal 2026 Financial Services spending bill filled with policy riders to roll back D.C. policies related to everything from traffic laws to reproductive
Last week, the House passed the fiscal 2026 Energy-Water appropriations bill in a 214-213 vote.
Vasquez’s district is key to both parties’ hopes of winning the House majority in 2026.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has yet to release its list of targeted Republicans as part of its Red to Blue program for the 2026 cycle.Â
House Democrats on Thursday identified 26 incumbents considered most vulnerable in the 2026 midterm elections.
The week also has an array of less contentious agenda items, one of which is a bill to authorize a congressional time capsule for the county’s semiquincentennial in 2026.
She is the first former Biden Cabinet secretary to formally announce a 2026 campaign, but at least two others are considering bids.
The agreement is up for review in 2026, and Trump issued a memo on Jan. 20 ordering USTR to begin taking public comments on the agreement.
At this early stage of the 2026 cycle, Inside Elections rates just five senators as vulnerable, including three Democrats (Georgia’s Jon Ossoff, Michigan’s Gary Peters and New Hampshire’s Jeanne Shaheen