Congress · 117th Congress
GOP claims victory in final defense policy bill
“This bill is a win.”</p> Democrats split In total 194 Republicans voted for the bill, along with 169 Democrats.
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“This bill is a win.”</p> Democrats split In total 194 Republicans voted for the bill, along with 169 Democrats.
</p> One of the provisions was in the Senate Armed Services Committee bill, one was in the House bill.
</p> Several Republicans prodded Adm.
</p> The rule would set up an arbitration process for payers and providers if they cannot reach an agreement on payment for services that would currently result in a surprise bill.
</p> Moreover, the special prosecutors would be more independent of the chain of command than in the original House bill.
</p> The bill, which would also delay scheduled cuts in Medicare and other programs, passed on a 222-212 vote.
</p> The House bill had mandated that the housing payments not be included in the income tally.
</p> McMorris Rodgers said the bill in question would force social media companies into an impossible choice between risking a lawsuit or avoiding litigation by removing content that might violate the
</p> “My reason for saying that and I still feel strongly about that is the unknown we’re facing today is much greater than the need that people believe [is addressed] in this aspirational bill that we
bill (S 1605) of the fiscal 2022 National Defense Authorization Act, which was released Tuesday.
</p> At the time it was introduced, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Judiciary Chairman Richard J.
</p> The SEC didn’t respond to a request to comment.</p> Not everyone agrees that regulators will be at odds.
Unable to move the bill, Senate leaders opted to scrap votes on it and instead write a compromise version of the measure with House lawmakers. </p> Senate Majority Leader Charles E.
’ edits to the House bill.”
(Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) This year’s design — slightly smaller than years past but still about 5 feet long and 3 feet tall — features a couple of nutcrackers and gingerbread people sledding down the
</p> Since it became clear in late October that the 15 percent minimum tax could make its way into the bill after what seemed to be a quixotic attempt by progressive lawmakers and the Biden administration
</p> CQ Roll Call delved into its archives to remember the former senator’s decades in D.C.</p> Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., talks on the telephone on a balcony in this undated photo.
Dole held the title from January 1985 until June 1996, when he resigned from Congress to focus on being that year’s GOP challenger to President Bill Clinton.
</p> “They wield this blue slip thing to mean whatever they want it to mean,” he said, noting that his amendment had already passed the Senate as a standalone bill, and would pass the House too if House
</p> Scott Peters, D-Calif., and Jodey C.