Opinion · 117th Congress
As federal pro-voter reform stalls, advocates should prepare for state-level action
</p> However, recent months have shown that there is more work to be done.
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</p> However, recent months have shown that there is more work to be done.
(Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) Congressional staffers carry National Seersucker Day cutouts into the Ohio Clock Corridor for the annual seersucker photo in the Capitol on Thursday. U.S.
</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> National Seersucker Day, an annual fashion event organized by Sen. Bill Cassidy, is back to its pre-pandemic form.
</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
” stimulus bill posed to the economy.
</p> “Let them earn it. Don’t give it on the front end. Let them earn it on the back end,” Manchin said.
</p> Just hours later, the Senate passed the bill by unanimous consent.
</p> During a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill, ranking member Charles E.
Under pressure from Mitch McConnell, these Republicans would never have voted for Democratic legislation no matter how many GOP ideas were inserted into the bill.
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> “Hey man, what’s up?” one reporter shouted to another as he walked back from another scrum, head buried in his phone.</p> “Everything,” was his curt reply.
</p> Attorney General Merrick B.