Politics · 115th Congress
For Freedom Caucus, No Place Like Home
President Donald Trump taunted the caucus on Twitter, threatening to work against Meadows and others in 2018 if they didn’t get on board.
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President Donald Trump taunted the caucus on Twitter, threatening to work against Meadows and others in 2018 if they didn’t get on board.
The top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee said Monday Congress should end a contentious “citizenship-for-sale” visa program in order to eliminate a potential conflict of interest for Jared Kushner
Before the Thursday vote on passage of the bill, those two amendments will be debated late Wednesday night by the Rules Committee, McCarthy said.
On a day Congress could have spent singing the praises of a bipartisan agreement to wrap up the long-overdue fiscal 2017 spending process, seemingly everyone — from Capitol Hill to the White House — found
Trump tweeted “We….either elect more Republican Senators in 2018 or change the rules now to 51%. Our country needs a good ‘shutdown’ in September to fix mess!.”
Alexander cited bipartisan negotiations he led last Congress on reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and on medical research funding as examples of where the Senate’s role worked
While the official whip count has not been shared with him, he said his three decades of experience in Congress helped him read the pulse of the conference.
Congress will need to clear the spending package before current appropriations under a continuing resolution expire at midnight on Friday.
Then comes time for all members to have ample opportunity to read the bill and a Rules Committee meeting to set the terms of floor action.
Syria aftermath The day after the U.S. missile strike on Syria, members of Congress emerged from a closed-door, classified briefing about the Trump administration’s actions with little to report
Some of the names are familiar, others have recently burst on the scene. They include members of Congress, congressional and administration staffers, and advocates.
But one unexpected development has been as a major factor in Hatch’s possible change of heart: Donald Trump in the White House.
“Paul is much more focused on policy than power,” Buck said Thursday in an interview, hours after discussing the book and life in Congress at a Heritage Foundation event.
Before reporters began peppering the leaders of the Senate panel with questions, the chairman laid down some ground rules.
In recent days Trump and some of his senior national security officials have signaled a much more bellicose stance on Iran, with the new president on Friday tweeting a warning.
“Congress is beginning to wonder what is going on,” Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Roll Call.
In the new Congress, Democrats may no longer be able to ensure, as they generally have to this point, that any dollar increase in the defense budget cap is matched by a dollar increase in the non-defense
.: President Donald Trump is signing a series of rules. One is the waiver to allow retired Marine Gen.
But the future of Congress’ only outside ethics review board is far from guaranteed.
Roy Blunt does his job well, the new president, Donald Trump, will shine. Only if something goes wrong on Jan. 20 will the Missouri Republican get any attention off the Hill.