Heard On The Hill · 116th Congress
Photos: Washington mourns death of Supreme Court icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg
</p> Washington-area residents turned out Friday night and Saturday at the court to mourn her death.
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</p> Washington-area residents turned out Friday night and Saturday at the court to mourn her death.
</p> With the political world becoming one big joke, it’s no surprise that SNL alum Maya Rudolph joined Sen.
</p> Here’s how the week unfolded for CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists.</p> Men play basketball Monday on the courts of New York Avenue Recreation Center in D.C.’s Truxton Circle neighborhood.
That year, the House Interior and Environment Appropriations Subcommittee advanced a spending bill that zeroed out funding for the project for fiscal 2013.
</p> The pair introduced a bill that was placed on the Senate calendar Wednesday that would postpone clocks from “falling back” one hour until November of 2021.
</p> Strauss said she was a champion not only for D.C. statehood, but for the rights of the city and its residents.
</p> Here’s a look at the week ending Sept. 11 through the lenses of CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists. </p> Former Georgia Rep. Ben L.
</p> “It’s a comfort to me that she lives on like that,” said Pepin.
, like a young Bill Clinton, a young Dick Cheney and a young Samuel Alito.
</p> Harris, as a senator-elect, is surrounded by reporters in the Capitol on Nov. 16, 2016, after the Senate Democratic Caucus leadership elections.
</p> And it sounds an awful lot like Donald Trump’s.
</p> I was on the floor one time giving a speech, and Congressman [Bill] Pascrell, I think his name is, from New Jersey, he called me a ‘wacko’ right in the middle of my speech. He yelled it out.
</p> This week on Capitol Hill, another lawmaker tested positive for COVID-19, everyone yelled about masks, and no one remembered to silence their phones or mute their Zoom calls.</p> Plus, Rep.
</p> Here’s a look at the week ending July 31 on Capitol Hill as seen through the lenses of CQ Roll Call’s photojournalists.
What happens when a veteran appropriations staffer who is about to retire tries to get his last bill passed with a minimum of commotion — and then things blow up?
</p> He won, and when he returned to Washington, he asked if I would go and work with him as a legislative aide.</p> Q: Were you working on Veterans’ Affairs issues?</p> A: I was.
</p> <p lang="en" dir="ltr">As a former Congressional aide, I can tell you that there are multiple meetings on every bill that are focused on reverse engineering an acronym to a title.
</p> “We read the first six or seven chapters of [Colorado Rep.
</p> Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden stands in the Ohio Clock Corridor on Tuesday during a vote in the Senate. (Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call) From left, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, Alabama Sen.
</p> Schaefer is also the communications director for the newly formed National Independent Venue Association, which advocated for assistance in a future coronavirus aid relief bill because of the deep