Congress · 119th Congress
Earmarks flood spending bills after a year’s hiatus
That measure far outshone the rest, with just under $6 billion in project funding across 3,212 individual projects.
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That measure far outshone the rest, with just under $6 billion in project funding across 3,212 individual projects.
and get blocks away for their safety, raises questions about communication shortfalls among partner agencies in the region as the issue of Capitol security is still being analyzed following the Jan. 6,
The GOP senators focused their questioning on the Air Force veteran’s July 2021 op-ed in Foreign Policy News reflecting on how the military should respond to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol
Most will run around $6-$7 per coin, not counting design fees, and really complex or large coins can easily cost double that.
And it eliminates the $6 billion allotted for member priorities, known as earmarks.
p> The two decades that followed have seen significant enhancements in Capitol security, training and operations for staffers and lawmakers alike — many of which were put to the test during the Jan. 6
The Senate is embarking on its second impeachment trial of President Donald Trump this week, focused on his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol.
Even as airlines continue to crack down on disruptive passengers in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, lawmakers are stepping up calls to add those who broke into the Capitol to the federal
Some Democrats in the Senate, too, say they agree airlines should do better: Democratic members of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee suggested during a May 6 hearing that
I left at 6 o’clock this morning, got here about 12:30,” Cuellar said, noting he was on his way back to the airport to fly home.
addition, the Democrats’ bill would offer significant expansions of earned income tax credits for childless adults, and refundable child tax credits up to $2,000, with an extra $1,600 per child under age 6.
Norton and Van Hollen asked for $6 million in supplemental fiscal year 2019 funds.
The White House recommended funding the agency at $21.4 billion, down from $26.5 billion Congress approved in a spending package (PL 116-6) in February.