Congress · 118th Congress
In first act, GOP-controlled House takes aim at IRS funding
</p> In a separate statement of administration policy, the White House said Biden would veto the bill if it somehow made it to his desk.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
</p> In a separate statement of administration policy, the White House said Biden would veto the bill if it somehow made it to his desk.
</p> Most of the earmarked funds secured by opponents of the bill, about $2.8 billion worth, were sponsored or co-sponsored by 110 House Republicans.
</p> The Florida Republican drew donations from major tax firms, companies across the health care and medical industries, mega billionaire Bill Gates and more during the three-month span from April through
</p> Kelly said Brady and Smith’s concerns are valid and suggested they could offer amendments to the bill. “But I think we’re pretty much now at rug-cutting time,” he said.
</p> Meanwhile, a bipartisan Senate duo teed up a nonbinding “motion to instruct” conferees to restore the R&D break as part of a bill aimed at boosting U.S. industrial competitiveness in part by providing
</p> Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., signed on as a co-sponsor to the bill, saying that “Wyoming has more than enough uranium to fill” the void of lost uranium imports.
</p> “Missouri families need help right now.
</p> That means the successor to retiring Texas Rep.
</p> After receiving a series of pandemic relief checks already, recipients may not realize that the new monthly payments they’ll get through the end of this year mean a lower refund or bigger tax bill
Democrats are pushing, letting the 2017 individual tax cuts expire and signing an infrastructure spending bill that isn’t fully paid for.
</p> Their bill would apply a 10 percentage point tax to income above $1 million for individuals and $2 million for married couples.
</p> Of those, at least seven submitted requests to the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee for inclusion in the big surface transportation bill that panel is working on, however.
</p> Nunes, a leading contender to succeed retiring Texas Rep.
</p> Nunes’ staff didn’t respond to a request for comment.
, TaskRabbit and the like are living paycheck to paycheck and won’t be able to pay the bill.
</p> Calling it the “Pelosi payoff,” Republicans offered a motion to recommit the bill back to the Budget Committee to consider an amendment from freshman Ashley Hinson, R-Iowa.
Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, James Lankford of Oklahoma, Steve Daines of Montana, John Kennedy of Louisiana, Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Mike Braun of Indiana, Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming