Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

13 results for "schedule"

Filters: 117th Congress army Clear all

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Senate, House seats up for grabs as Nevada starts early voting

have focused on inflation, with Laxalt in particular working to tie his incumbent opponent to Biden, often noting disparagingly that the president has not stopped in Nevada on his preelection campaign schedule

Congress · 117th Congress

Senators pry open spigot for Biden’s diplomatic nominees

To that end, Cruz last month indicated he will continue to place holds on State Department nominees in order to amass leverage to try to compel Speaker Nancy Pelosi to schedule a vote on the sanctions

Policy · 117th Congress

Pentagon may not immediately fire vaccine resisters

While it is clear that termination of employment is a possible consequence for those who do not comply on schedule, how and when the policy would be enforced is not yet clear.

Congress · 117th Congress

House passes stopgap funding, debt ceiling suspension bill

The bill would extend fentanyl’s status as a so-called “Schedule 1” drug until Jan. 28, 2022. Under current law, the drug would lose its status as a drug with a high risk for abuse on Oct. 22.

Policy · 117th Congress

Top Republican wants even ‘more money’ for defense

The Senate Appropriations Committee is marking up the Military Construction-VA and Energy-Water bills this week, while an official schedule for the Defense bill has yet to be announced.

Congress · 117th Congress

Senate appropriations earmark requests start rolling in

Leahy hasn’t announced a markup schedule yet, but Tilton said earlier this week that the panel may start considering its versions of the fiscal 2022 spending bills in late July or early August before

Congress · 117th Congress

‘Quite a week,’ Pelosi says, previewing more to come

The California Democrat followed the remark with a preview of the upcoming congressional schedule that shows the daunting amount of work on lawmakers’ plates won’t go away anytime soon.