Congress · 117th Congress
Senate approves treaty that would limit potent greenhouse gases
It requires the State Department, before Nov. 6, to propose naming China as an industrialized nation under the U.N.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
It requires the State Department, before Nov. 6, to propose naming China as an industrialized nation under the U.N.
the table — although other Democrats kept prodding — were major party priorities like an expanded child tax credit, paid family and medical leave, universal pre-kindergarten, child care for kids under 6,
By a 6-3 vote, the conservative majority ruled the agency does not possess broad authority to regulate pollution from electric utilities.
Estimates are that the country has 6 million to 10 million lead service lines, with disadvantaged communities particularly at risk.
A ruling from the court, with its 6-3 conservative majority, could narrow the EPA’s authority under the Clean Air Act to regulate greenhouse gases from the power sector, the second-largest source
Cheney, by contrast, denounced Trump after the Jan. 6 attacks and voted for his impeachment.
The $45 billion would help eliminate lead pipes and service lines serving what the administration estimates is between 6 million and 10 million homes, as well 400,000 schools and childcare facilities
Updated Dec. 16 at 6:05 p.m. House appropriators filed two mega spending packages for floor consideration Tuesday after hammering out last-minute details over the weekend.
The administration has succeeded in about 6% of those efforts, according to the group’s latest figures, from early March.
Updated 6:08 p.m. | Senate Minority Leader Charles E.
6. Housing and real estate The resolution calls for the government to provide safe and affordable housing for all U.S. residents.
The lack of disclosure violated a 1976 law known as the Toxic Substances Control Act, and DuPont reached a settlement with the agency to pay $10.3 million in civil penalties and perform more than $6 million
The chamber’s political operation spent more than $7 million in outside expenditures during the 2018 election cycle, with $6 million supporting Republican candidates, $1 million spent to defeat Democrats
The Interior-Environment bill would provide $35.9 billion in discretionary spending subject to budget caps for FY 2019 — $300 million more than FY 2018 and $6 billion more than requested.