Video · 117th Congress
Landmark collisions — Congressional Hits and Misses
Another busy week on Capitol Hill concluded Friday with the passage of a major bipartisan gun violence reduction bill.
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Another busy week on Capitol Hill concluded Friday with the passage of a major bipartisan gun violence reduction bill.
The days are in the single digits for Congress to pass a government funding bill that keeps the lights on after next Thursday.
</p> The bill, co-sponsored by Democratic Rep.
</p> The Georgia Democrat spoke Tuesday ahead of a procedural vote involving Democrats’ massive voting rights bill. Watch the video for excerpts of his remarks.
</p> But Congress broke its usual gridlock this week and quickly passed a bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday.</p> Meanwhile, a fly invaded the Senate floor, Sen.
</p> Attorney General Merrick B.
A bill that would direct the SEC to mandate disclosure of ESG metrics is slated for a House floor vote next week.
foreign aid bill that delivers billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars in military support to Israel and hundreds of millions of dollars in development and humanitarian assistance to the Palestinians.
While the Senate couldn’t pass a Jan. 6 commission bill, Majority Leader Charles E.
</p> CQ Roll Call’s Dean DeChiaro speaks with Rep.
Steve Cohen whipped out a “you can’t handle the truth” meme in response to Republican opposition to the House’s bipartisan Jan. 6 commission bill that faces an uncertain future in the Senate.
Jackie Speier wrote a provision in the fiscal 2021 defense authorization bill that specifically listed violent extremism as a crime in the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
</p> The House on May 13 also passed, 323-93, a bill to require HHS to develop guidelines for behavioral intervention teams in schools.
</p> Meanwhile, not long before CQ Roll Call photographer Bill Clark captured a squirrel eating a Snickers bar outside the Capitol, Sen. Jeff Merkley put down his own Snickers to speak at a hearing.
</p> Military commanders largely looked the other way.</p> “The Navy experience was a minor contributing factor to my radicalization process.
</p> Peters and Portman in late April introduced a bipartisan bill to create a $20 million cyber response fund over seven years.
</p> Sen.
</p> On the other end were potential losses for Rhode Island, Minnesota and Alabama that failed to materialize.
The House passed a bill Thursday that would make Washington the 51st state, but the bill faces a difficult fight ahead in the Senate.
He voted for both of Donald Trump’s impeachments, and before that, for a federal judge’s and against Bill Clinton’s. But in his first, he didn’t get to vote at all. </p> It was his own.