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Campaigns · 117th Congress

Senate candidates walk Trump tightrope as he returns to Arizona

Coughlin’s firm, Higher Ground, surveyed 500 voters in Maricopa County from July 6-7 and found that nearly 51 percent opposed the audit, 41 percent supported it, and 9 percent did not know or refused

Opinion · 117th Congress

Kids need schools open. So does the economy

also found that students “currently in grades K-5 from disadvantaged backgrounds will have on average 10.9 percent lower labor income in 2050 than was expected before the closures, while those in grades 6-

Opinion · 117th Congress

Election Day 2022 will be Independents’ Day

Our July 6-8 Winning the Issues survey saw Biden’s job approval underwater, with 40 percent of independents approving the job he is doing and 47 percent disapproving. 

Congress · 117th Congress

Budget blueprint for massive spending package starts to take shape

They declined to say whether they’ve moved off the $6 trillion, 10-year spending target Budget Chairman Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., previously floated, or narrowed the gap between that and a lower ceiling centrists

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

Photos of the week ending July 2, 2021

Mo Brooks talks with Capitol Police officers Wednesday before the House voted to create select committee to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Policy · 117th Congress

Investors press firms on donations as political spending jumps

treasurers and social issue-focused investment funds are pressing 82 corporations to be transparent about donations to candidates and causes as contributions resume after a pause in the wake of the Jan. 6

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

More activists should go work for Congress, these staffers say

[‘They wouldn’t care if I was dead’ — staffer fallout from Jan. 6 continues] If successful, the staff association will make Capitol Hill more fertile for progressive policy ideas trying to take

White House · 117th Congress

Biden OK with $300 unemployment supplement expiring

coronavirus relief law extended the pandemic unemployment assistance program — initially enacted in spring of 2020 to supplement state benefits for workers who lost their jobs due to COVID-19 — to Sept. 6.

Congress · 117th Congress

Research and development ambitions will test bipartisanship

Corrected | As partisan disagreements over infrastructure and a national commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol dominated headlines last week, Congress and President Joe Biden

White House · 117th Congress

Maybe Biden is a moderate after all

Republican senators on May 28 filibustered for the first time this Congress, blocking consideration of a bill to create a commission to study the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol because they fear it would hurt

Policy · 117th Congress

$6 trillion Biden budget would launch spending spree

President Joe Biden unveiled a $6 trillion budget blueprint Friday that would set the government on a spending spree to make up for what White House officials described as a “decade of disinvestment.”

Congress · 117th Congress

Vulnerable Democrats bet earmark stigma has worn off

Pete Sessions in 2018 and won reelection last year by a 6-point margin with nearly 52 percent of the vote, doesn’t expect earmarks to be used against him in the midterms.

Congress · 117th Congress

Cracks in party unity could stall Democratic momentum

ANALYSIS — House Republicans remain divided on how to handle former President Donald Trump, as their 35 defections on Democrats’ proposal for a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol

Congress · 117th Congress

Democratic unity makes Biden’s ambition possible

Still, other Democrats in Trump districts who didn’t win their own races by as comfortable a margin as Golden’s 6-point edge, aren’t moving to the center.