Congress · 117th Congress
Pentagon leaders push back on GOP ‘critical race theory’ accusations
Austin’s directive followed the Jan. 6 insurrection, when a crowd of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol.
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Austin’s directive followed the Jan. 6 insurrection, when a crowd of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol.
Sanders, I-Vt., has pitched options adding up to about $6 trillion.
Republicans to begin serious negotiations on a spending package to stave off what could become a security nightmare for the Capitol complex and the police officers who kept lawmakers alive during the Jan. 6
Bagenstos said in a May 6 letter to GAO. Instead, the administration “had to make choices about how to prioritize the use of the specifically appropriated funds that remained.”
Commerce committee’s five-year overall funding authorization level breaks down into three buckets: $36 billion for rail, $27.8 billion for multimodal grants and $13 billion for safety programs, including $6
renew Europeans’ faith in the long-term U.S. commitment to internationalism and the post-World War II democratic order is constrained by European concerns about recent domestic events, notably the Jan. 6
National Guard help before Jan. 6.
Business PACs, many of which paused donations earlier this year amid fallout from the violent Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, have begun to send more money to lawmakers, including to the 147 Republicans
The other 6 million doses will go to countries that are regional priorities or partners.
Shelby, R-Ala., haven’t yet begun detailed negotiations over how to rework the House-passed security spending package that’s intended to pay bills related to the Jan. 6 insurrection and bolster security
That includes, he said, $6 billion for operations and maintenance to account for higher inflation; $2 billion for military construction; $8 billion in procurement; and $4 billion in research, particularly
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
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.”
[$6 trillion budget would launch government spending spree] Here are the top 10 things to know about Biden’s fiscal 2022 budget request: 1.
If not, the deliberations could bleed past Labor Day and the pending expiration of enhanced unemployment benefits on Sept. 6.
Austin III, who assumed office just weeks after the Jan. 6 riot, said in a press release that the National Guard performed “magnificently.”
Concerned by the overrepresentation of veterans and current servicemembers among those charged in the Jan. 6 insurrection by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters, senators have been
The House passed a $1.9 billion spending bill Thursday that Democrats hoped would pay for bills incurred since the Jan. 6 insurrection, bolster the Capitol’s police force and improve the complex’s security
Christopher Warnagiris last week became the fifth servicemember, and the first on active duty, arrested for participating in the Jan. 6 pro-Trump insurrection at the Capitol.
This, as members of his GOP are resisting calls to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol and downplaying injuries suffered by officers protecting those lawmakers’ hides.