Congress · 117th Congress
Senate voting and ethics overhaul stalls, but Democrats united in vote
</p> [Senate voting rights bill doesn’t dominate Biden’s day]</p> Senate Majority Leader Charles E.
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</p> [Senate voting rights bill doesn’t dominate Biden’s day]</p> Senate Majority Leader Charles E.
</p> First, America’s military service chiefs, in separate letters made public Tuesday, indirectly but unmistakably criticized a bill by Sen.
</p> Those watching the bill say they have a good idea why: Sen. Patrick J.
</p> House Democrats approved a $1.9 billion spending package following a 213-212 vote in May amid unified Republican opposition to the bill.
bill befuddles.
</p> The House passed a bill in April to make the District a state called “Washington, Douglass Commonwealth,” in honor of abolitionist Frederick Douglass.
</p> The budget targets for each committee outlined in the blueprint are a critical part of the reconciliation process, which both chambers need to adopt for a bill to be eligible for reconciliation protections
</p> President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act on Thursday after the bill passed rapidly through both chambers of Congress this week.
</p> Lawmakers voted, 268-161, to pass the bill to terminate the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force. Forty-nine Republicans voted to repeal.
Democrats are pushing, letting the 2017 individual tax cuts expire and signing an infrastructure spending bill that isn’t fully paid for.
</p> Senate Majority Leader Charles E.
</p> The House passed legislation known as the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act, 415-14, on Wednesday, clearing the bill for the president’s signature.
</p> A Statement of Administration Policy from the White House Office of Management and Budget this week expressed support for passage of the ESG bill, saying it would require important changes to how
for any filibuster-proof reconciliation bill — in mid-July.
</p> Back in late 2018, Trump wanted $5 billion in a fiscal 2019 spending bill to build a wall. Congress appropriated $1.375 billion for fencing.
</p> Lawmakers negotiating a bipartisan infrastructure bill are not discussing the corporate tax increases Biden proposed to offset such spending because Republicans are universally opposed.
</p> Attorney General Merrick B.
</p> [jwp-video n=”1″]</p> But in a Senate divided 50-50, the Democrats on the left are still stuck because no bill will advance without the votes of Sinema and Manchin and something, the respondents
</p> [Hill staffers expect infrastructure bill to pass, but little else]</p> The five Senate Democrats who voted “no” two years ago were Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, Michael Bennet of Colorado,