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WEATHER ALERT

A rip current statement in effect for Coastal Broward and Coastal Miami Dade Regions

STENY HOYER


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Scenes at US Capitol on war's anniversary reflect partisan divide on Ukraine

Read full article: Scenes at US Capitol on war's anniversary reflect partisan divide on Ukraine

The commemoration of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine three years ago was mostly a Democratic affair at the U.S. Capitol.

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Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer, former House Democratic leader, is recovering from mild stroke

Read full article: Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer, former House Democratic leader, is recovering from mild stroke

Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer, the former House Democratic leader, is recovering after experiencing a mild stroke on Sunday.

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The Latest: Harris begins policy rollout; material from Trump campaign leaked to news outlets

Read full article: The Latest: Harris begins policy rollout; material from Trump campaign leaked to news outlets

Vice President Kamala Harris is trying to outmaneuver former President Donald Trump and address old vulnerabilities on her policy positions as she starts to fill in how she would govern if elected in November.

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Senate primaries set up a marquee race in Maryland and a likely Republican flip in West Virginia

Read full article: Senate primaries set up a marquee race in Maryland and a likely Republican flip in West Virginia

Republican voters have advanced strong Senate contenders in Maryland and West Virginia, giving the GOP a big boost in its push to claim control of Congress’ upper chamber.

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Ex-GOP Gov. Hogan is popular with some Maryland Democrats, but not enough to put him in the Senate

Read full article: Ex-GOP Gov. Hogan is popular with some Maryland Democrats, but not enough to put him in the Senate

Maryland Democrats are trying to decide which Senate candidate is best positioned to beat Republican Larry Hogan, a popular former governor.

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Biden chooses a longtime Hill aide respected by Republicans as his new legislative affairs director

Read full article: Biden chooses a longtime Hill aide respected by Republicans as his new legislative affairs director

President Joe Biden has chosen Shuwanza Goff as his new director of legislative affairs, making her the first Black woman to be the White House’s chief emissary to Capitol Hill.

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Maryland officials make pitch to GSA on new FBI headquarters

Read full article: Maryland officials make pitch to GSA on new FBI headquarters

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and members of the state’s congressional delegation are renewing their pitch to build a new FBI headquarters in Maryland instead of Virginia.

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House approves referendum to 'decolonize' Puerto Rico

Read full article: House approves referendum to 'decolonize' Puerto Rico

The U.S. House has passed a bill that would allow Puerto Rico to hold the first-ever binding referendum on whether to become a state or gain some sort of independence.

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Congress acts to remove bust of Dred Scott decision author

Read full article: Congress acts to remove bust of Dred Scott decision author

The bust of a U.S. Supreme Court justice who wrote an infamous decision on slavery could soon be leaving the Capitol.

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Congress set to rescind COVID-19 vaccine mandate for troops

Read full article: Congress set to rescind COVID-19 vaccine mandate for troops

The COVID-19 vaccine mandate for members of the U.S. military would be rescinded under the annual defense bill heading for a vote this week in Congress.

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Clyburn elected House Dems' assistant leader, averts contest

Read full article: Clyburn elected House Dems' assistant leader, averts contest

House Democrats unanimously chose Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina for a new role in party leadership next year.

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Jeffries wins historic bid to lead House Dems after Pelosi

Read full article: Jeffries wins historic bid to lead House Dems after Pelosi

New York congressman Hakeem Jeffries has been elected House Democratic leader and will become in the new year the first Black American to lead a major political party in Congress.

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House votes to avert rail strike, impose deal on unions

Read full article: House votes to avert rail strike, impose deal on unions

Congress is moving urgently to head off the looming U.S. rail strike.

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Biden calls on Congress to head off potential rail strike

Read full article: Biden calls on Congress to head off potential rail strike

President Joe Biden is calling on Congress to pass legislation to intervene and block a railroad strike before next month’s deadline in the stalled contract talks.

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Jeffries makes historic bid to lead House Dems after Pelosi

Read full article: Jeffries makes historic bid to lead House Dems after Pelosi

A day after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would step aside, congressman Hakeem Jeffries of New York has announced his history-making bid to become the first Black person to helm a major political party in Congress as leader of the House Democrats.

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Top progressive Jayapal passes on Dem leadership race

Read full article: Top progressive Jayapal passes on Dem leadership race

Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal has taken herself out of the running for Democratic leadership in the next Congress.

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Pelosi steps down as Democratic leader in House of Representatives

Read full article: Pelosi steps down as Democratic leader in House of Representatives

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she won't seek a leadership role in the new Congress.

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Congress faces leaders in flux, big to-do list post-election

Read full article: Congress faces leaders in flux, big to-do list post-election

Congress is returning to an extremely volatile post-election landscape.

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Pelosi holds open option of another term as House Dem leader

Read full article: Pelosi holds open option of another term as House Dem leader

With control of the House still hanging in the balance, Speaker Nancy Pelosi is staying mum on her future plans.

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To hold House, Democrats eye GOP-held districts won by Biden

Read full article: To hold House, Democrats eye GOP-held districts won by Biden

A congressional district in Michigan that includes Grand Rapids hasn't had a Democratic House member in decades.

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From fringe to front row: Congresswoman Greene rises in GOP

Read full article: From fringe to front row: Congresswoman Greene rises in GOP

Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene once was shunned as a political pariah for her extremist rhetoric.

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McCarthy unveils House GOP's midterm agenda in Pennsylvania

Read full article: McCarthy unveils House GOP's midterm agenda in Pennsylvania

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy is rolling out his party's Trump-like midterm election agenda.

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Manchin rails against 'revenge politics' on permit plan

Read full article: Manchin rails against 'revenge politics' on permit plan

Sen. Joe Manchin on Tuesday railed against what he called “revenge politics″ being used against him, as liberals in the House and Senate team up with Republicans to oppose his plan to speed permits for natural gas pipelines and other energy projects.

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House approves bill to help West fight wildfires, drought

Read full article: House approves bill to help West fight wildfires, drought

The House has approved wide-ranging legislation aimed at helping communities in the West cope with increasingly severe wildfires and drought — fueled by climate change — that have caused billions of dollars of damage to homes and businesses in recent years.

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Author Wes Moore wins Democratic race for Maryland governor

Read full article: Author Wes Moore wins Democratic race for Maryland governor

Bestselling author Wes Moore has won the Democratic primary for Maryland governor.

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Trump-backed Cox wins Md. governor primary over Hogan's pick

Read full article: Trump-backed Cox wins Md. governor primary over Hogan's pick

A far-right Maryland legislator endorsed by former President Donald Trump has won the Republican primary for governor.

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2022 midterms: What to watch in Maryland's primary elections

Read full article: 2022 midterms: What to watch in Maryland's primary elections

The Republican race for Maryland governor in Tuesday’s primary election pits a candidate backed by outgoing Gov. Larry Hogan against a rival endorsed by Donald Trump.

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EXPLAINER: How Biden's proposed gas tax holiday would work

Read full article: EXPLAINER: How Biden's proposed gas tax holiday would work

Facing stubbornly high gas prices that average about $5 a gallon nationwide, President Joe Biden has urged Congress to suspend federal gasoline and diesel taxes for three months.

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Gridlock could delay COVID funds until fall — or longer

Read full article: Gridlock could delay COVID funds until fall — or longer

The Biden administration foresees unnecessary deaths if lawmakers don’t approve billions of dollars more to brace for the pandemic’s next wave.

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House official: Lawmakers should not carry guns at Capitol

Read full article: House official: Lawmakers should not carry guns at Capitol

The House’s top law enforcement official says members of Congress should be barred from carrying firearms anywhere in the Capitol or its surrounding office buildings and grounds.

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Clarification: Puerto Rico-Statehood story

Read full article: Clarification: Puerto Rico-Statehood story

In a story published May 19, 2022, The Associated Press reported that a group of Democratic congress members on Thursday proposed a binding plebiscite to decide whether Puerto Rico should become a state or gain some sort of independence.

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Brazilian groups want direct access to U.S. forest funding

Read full article: Brazilian groups want direct access to U.S. forest funding

Brazilian environmental and Indigenous organizations are urging the United States to fund forest protection initiatives that directly involve forest peoples.

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COVID spending bill stalls in Senate as GOP, Dems stalemate

Read full article: COVID spending bill stalls in Senate as GOP, Dems stalemate

A compromise $10 billion measure buttressing the government’s COVID-19 defenses has stalled in the Senate.

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Six-days-a-week mail delivery saved; Biden signs Postal bill

Read full article: Six-days-a-week mail delivery saved; Biden signs Postal bill

President Joe Biden has signed into law plans for a sweeping overhaul of the U.S. Postal Service.

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Billions, and more, for lawmakers' projects in spending bill

Read full article: Billions, and more, for lawmakers' projects in spending bill

Home-district projects for members of Congress are back, sprinkled across the government-wide $1.5 trillion bill that President Joe Biden signed recently.

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House votes to decriminalize marijuana, but Senate fate dim

Read full article: House votes to decriminalize marijuana, but Senate fate dim

The House has approved a bill decriminalizing marijuana and letting states set their own policies on pot.

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Top lawmakers reach deal on Ukraine aid, $1.5T spending

Read full article: Top lawmakers reach deal on Ukraine aid, $1.5T spending

Congressional leaders have reached a bipartisan deal to provide $13.6 billion to help Ukraine fend off its invasion by Russia and assist European allies coping with the continent's worst refugee crisis since World War II.

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Kamala Harris marks 'Bloody Sunday' anniversary in Selma

Read full article: Kamala Harris marks 'Bloody Sunday' anniversary in Selma

Vice President Kamala Harris is in Selma, Alabama, to mark the anniversary of a defining moment in the fight for equal voting rights.

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Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the center

Read full article: Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the center

President Joe Biden is signaling an election-year shift to the center to help protect fragile Democratic majorities in Congress, even as key voices across his party’s sprawling political coalition threaten revolt.

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Hill Dems, GOP show signs of backing $6.4B for Ukraine aid

Read full article: Hill Dems, GOP show signs of backing $6.4B for Ukraine aid

Congressional Democrats and Republicans are showing signs of support for providing $6.4 billion or more in aid to Ukraine and its European neighbors.

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GOP lawmaker apologizes for cursing at Democrat over masks

Read full article: GOP lawmaker apologizes for cursing at Democrat over masks

A senior Republican lawmaker has apologized for using an expletive when Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio asked him to put his mask on while in the Capitol.

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Key Pa. Dems to miss Biden visit, cite scheduling conflicts

Read full article: Key Pa. Dems to miss Biden visit, cite scheduling conflicts

President Joe Biden will appear in Pittsburgh on Friday as an opening step in a broader campaign to promote the White House’s achievements in key states before the midterm elections.

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Biden visits collapsed bridge, touts infrastructure law

Read full article: Biden visits collapsed bridge, touts infrastructure law

President Joe Biden has visited the bridge in Pittsburgh that collapsed just hours before his previously scheduled trip to promote his infrastructure package — a new law that aims to prevent just such disasters.

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Dick Cheney: an unlikely bridge to partisan Congress divide

Read full article: Dick Cheney: an unlikely bridge to partisan Congress divide

Former Vice President Dick Cheney has made a surprise appearance in the House in a show of support for his daughter, Rep. Liz Cheney.

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Reviving Biden's big bill, Democrats look to regain momentum

Read full article: Reviving Biden's big bill, Democrats look to regain momentum

Democratic leaders are pressing ahead on President Joe Biden’s big domestic policy bill.

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House Dems delay huge social bill, plan infrastructure vote

Read full article: House Dems delay huge social bill, plan infrastructure vote

Top Democrats have abruptly postponed an expected House vote on their 10-year, $1.85 trillion social and environment measure.

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Biden's big bill on brink of House votes, but fights remain

Read full article: Biden's big bill on brink of House votes, but fights remain

Democrats in the House appear on the verge of advancing President Joe Biden’s $1.85 trillion-and-growing domestic policy package.

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Democrats reach drug price deal, Biden upbeat on Manchin

Read full article: Democrats reach drug price deal, Biden upbeat on Manchin

Democrats say they have sealed a deal to lower pharmaceutical drug costs for most older Americans as part of President Joe Biden’s sweeping $1.75 trillion domestic proposal.

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Biden’s climate plan at risk, Democrats race to strike deal

Read full article: Biden’s climate plan at risk, Democrats race to strike deal

Scaling back his big government-overhaul plans, President Joe Biden has described a more-limited vision to Democratic lawmakers.

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House sends debt limit hike to Biden, staving off default

Read full article: House sends debt limit hike to Biden, staving off default

Members of the House have approved a short-term hike to the nation’s debt limit.

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McConnell says he won't help Dems raise debt limit again

Read full article: McConnell says he won't help Dems raise debt limit again

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says he will not again help Democrats extend the government’s borrowing authority.

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Big pressure on Biden, Dems to trim $3.5T federal overhaul

Read full article: Big pressure on Biden, Dems to trim $3.5T federal overhaul

Pressure is mounting on President Joe Biden to trim back his $3.5 trillion federal government overhaul to win over holdout fellow Democrats.

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House OKs $1 billion for Israel's Iron Dome defense system

Read full article: House OKs $1 billion for Israel's Iron Dome defense system

The House has overwhelming passed legislation to provide funding for Israel’s missile defense system.

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Biden meets with Democrats as $3.5T plan faces party split

Read full article: Biden meets with Democrats as $3.5T plan faces party split

President Joe Biden has met with Democrats from the House and Senate as Congress works to bridge party divisions over his big $3.5 trillion “build back better” agenda.

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House OKs debt and funding plan, inviting clash with GOP

Read full article: House OKs debt and funding plan, inviting clash with GOP

The House has approved legislation to fund the government, suspend its borrowing limit and provide federal disaster and refugee aid.

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House Dems plan budget vote next week, defying moderates

Read full article: House Dems plan budget vote next week, defying moderates

Top Democrats are planning House votes next week on a budget resolution that would clear a path for future passage of the party's ambitious plans for social and environment programs.

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Pelosi faces new threat from moderate Democrats over budget

Read full article: Pelosi faces new threat from moderate Democrats over budget

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is facing a fresh hurdle to passing President Joe Biden’s multi-trillion dollar domestic policy aspirations.

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Top Dem sees tough pathway for $3.5T social, climate plans

Read full article: Top Dem sees tough pathway for $3.5T social, climate plans

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is conceding that Democrats face a tough pathway to delivering a $3.5 trillion package for family, health and environment programs to President Joe Biden’s desk.

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Infrastructure talks leave Biden's entire agenda at risk

Read full article: Infrastructure talks leave Biden's entire agenda at risk

President Joe Biden has leapt back into the Senate’s up-and-down efforts to clinch a bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure deal.

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Pelosi, Schumer to huddle with White House on infrastructure

Read full article: Pelosi, Schumer to huddle with White House on infrastructure

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer will confer with White House officials on next steps for President Joe Biden’s $4 trillion infrastructure plans.

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Maxine Waters' bold words echo civil rights, draw criticism

Read full article: Maxine Waters' bold words echo civil rights, draw criticism

When Rep. Maxine Waters urged people to be “confrontational” in the pursuit of justice for George Floyd, advocates for racial equity heard a leading Black voice in the nation's long march toward civil rights.

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‘Clear the Capitol,’ Pence pleaded, timeline of riot shows

Read full article: ‘Clear the Capitol,’ Pence pleaded, timeline of riot shows

New details from the deadly riot of Jan. 6 are in a previously undisclosed document prepared by the Pentagon for internal use.

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Eager to act, Biden and Democrats leave Republicans behind

Read full article: Eager to act, Biden and Democrats leave Republicans behind

But lawmakers and advocates are racing to capitalize on House rules that allow any bill to bypass lengthy committee hearings if brought forward by April 1. Senate Republicans are now threatening similar delays. Ad“We’ll be fighting this in every way that we can,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said about the COVID-19 package. McConnell wants Senate Republicans to vote in lockstep against the virus aid, calling it a bloated liberal wish list, following the lead of House Republicans who gave it zero support. That leaves Democrats negotiating with themselves on the COVID-19 package, with Biden warning they won’t like every aspect as he courts centrists.

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Rep. Greene says 'morons' voted to boot her from committees

Read full article: Rep. Greene says 'morons' voted to boot her from committees

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., goes back to her office after speaking on the floor of the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)WASHINGTON – Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene lashed out Friday at “morons” in both parties who voted to kick her off her committees, a day after the House meted out the unprecedented punishment that Democrats said she’d earned by spreading hateful and violent conspiracy theories. Underscoring the political vise her inflammatory commentary has clamped her party into, all but 11 Republicans voted against the Democratic move on Thursday but none rose to defend her lengthy history of outrageous social media posts. Even social media stars like Greene could find it harder to define themselves without the spotlights that committees provide. That chamber’s minority leader, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., this week called Greene’s words a “cancer” on the GOP and country.

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House Democrats move to remove Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from committee assignments

Read full article: House Democrats move to remove Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from committee assignments

WASHINGTON – House Democrats moved Wednesday to remove Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from her committee assignments. This comes after she has made several disparaging comments and social media posts, including a video in which she refers to the Parkland school shooting as a hoax and harasses one of the student survivors. The House rules committee debated the rule on the removal of Greene from House committees on the budget, and education and labor. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer announced there will likely be a floor vote on Thursday. Greene pedals conspiracy theory that advocate violence, Rep. Ted Deutch said during the debate, adding that by assigning her to House committees Republicans are giving her a platform and normalizing her behavior.

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GOP's McConnell blasts 'loony lies' by Ga. Rep. Greene

Read full article: GOP's McConnell blasts 'loony lies' by Ga. Rep. Greene

It comes as House Democrats moved Monday to strip Greene of her committee assignments if Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., refuses to do so himself. One suggested shooting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the head. Last week, Pelosi pressed House Republicans to take action. A spokesperson for the Republican leader declined to comment Monday. AdAlthough it’s not certain he will take action against Greene, McCarthy has punished members of the House Republican caucus before.

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Democrats to 'act big' on $1.9T aid; GOP wants plan split

Read full article: Democrats to 'act big' on $1.9T aid; GOP wants plan split

In this Jan. 27, 2021, photo, President Joe Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. Democrats in the House and Senate are operating as though they know they are borrowed time. Schumer said he drew from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's advice to “act big” to weather the COVID-19 economic crisis. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, a former White House budget director under George W. Bush, wants a deeper accounting of what funds remain from the $900 billion coronavirus aid package from December. “The risks of going too small dramatically outweigh the risks of going too big,” said Gene Sperling, a former director of the White House National Economic Council, who signed the letter.

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Impeachment could become defining moment for Liz Cheney

Read full article: Impeachment could become defining moment for Liz Cheney

3 House Republican had already broken with the president on everything from mask-wearing during the coronavirus pandemic to pulling back American troops in Afghanistan. Now she's emerging as the most prominent Republican to back Trump's impeachment — the only member of her party's leadership doing so. The 10 Republicans who voted in favor of impeachment was small but significant — when Trump was impeached last year, no House Republicans supported it. As the only woman in House GOP leadership, Cheney has been seen as a possible candidate for House speaker should the GOP regain the majority in 2022 or beyond. This is a very, very difficult decision,” Utah Republican Rep. John Curtis said of Cheney.

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House urges Pence to help oust Trump; impeachment next

Read full article: House urges Pence to help oust Trump; impeachment next

The House is trying to push the vice president and Cabinet to act even more quickly to remove President Donald Trump from office. Democrats are set to pass a resolution calling on Vice President Mike Pence to invoke constitutional authority under the 25th Amendment to oust Trump. Trump, meanwhile, warned the lawmakers off impeachment and suggested it was the drive to oust him that was dividing the country. Trump faces a single charge — “incitement of insurrection” — in the impeachment resolution after the most serious and deadly domestic incursion at the Capitol in the nation’s history. Trump was impeached by the House in 2019 over dealings with Ukraine and acquitted in 2020 by the Senate.

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The Latest: No public access to Capitol grounds Jan. 20

Read full article: The Latest: No public access to Capitol grounds Jan. 20

With the Washington Monument in the background, people attend a rally in support of President Donald Trump on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. The announcement comes after thousands of supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol last week as legislators were meeting to vote to certify Biden’s electoral win. The State Department is investigating what appears to be a “prank” after its website suggested President Donald Trump’s term would end Monday evening. It comes days after thousands of supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop the congressional certification of Biden’s victory. The National Park Service is shutting down public access to the Washington Monument until Jan. 24, citing threats surrounding Joe Biden’s inauguration.

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Democrats tighten control with House rules changes

Read full article: Democrats tighten control with House rules changes

Democrats have freely used the new system, which maximized their voting participation while Republican leaders have urged their members to vote in person. The rules changes come as Democrats hold a bare majority in the House of fewer than a half-dozen seats, the narrowest margin of control in memory. Understanding the bundle of changes requires a dive into the arcane world of House rules and parliamentary maneuvering. The Democratic-imposed rules continue a years-long trend of eroding the powers of the House minority through revisions enacted every two years. “It is all designed to take away the voice of 48 percent of this House chamber,” said Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La.

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Senate GOP blocks Democratic push for Trump’s $2K checks

Read full article: Senate GOP blocks Democratic push for Trump’s $2K checks

“We should not adjourn until the Senate holds a vote,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said as he made a motion to push it toward a vote. McConnell, who has said little publicly on Trump’s request, objected but gave almost no indication of his plans ahead. Congress had settled on smaller $600 payments in a compromise over the big year-end relief bill Trump reluctantly signed into law. Loeffler said in an interview on Fox that she, too, backs the boosted relief checks. Most House Republicans simply shrugged off Trump’s push, 130 of them voting to reject the higher checks that would add $467 billion in additional costs.

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Biden may time confirmation votes to protect House majority

Read full article: Biden may time confirmation votes to protect House majority

FILE - In this Sept. 17, 2020, file photo, House Majority Whip James Clyburn, of S.C., speaks during a news conference about COVID-19, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Pelosi will start the Biden era with a narrow majority, 222-211, with a few races still undecided. Biden's first pick from the House, Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., would join the administration quickly once the president-elect is inaugurated Jan. 20, Clyburn said. Democrats are already deep into political soul-searching after a dismal November outcome for House Democrats. The danger zone was close enough that House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer warned Biden last month off taking any more Democrats from his ranks.

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Biggest vets groups step up pressure on Trump to fire Wilkie

Read full article: Biggest vets groups step up pressure on Trump to fire Wilkie

FILE - In this July 7, 2020 file photo, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Richard Wilkie speaks at the National Press Club in Washington. Confronted with a sexual assault allegation at a veterans hospital, Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit the female congressional staffer who made the complaint. The groups pressed Trump to act in the last weeks of his administration since Wilkie had refused to accept responsibility and was refusing to resign. Wilkie and other senior officials had declined to fully cooperate with the investigation by VA Inspector General Michael Missal. Wilkie is Trump’s second VA secretary after David Shulkin was fired in 2018.

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Negotiators report progress on long-delayed COVID aid bill

Read full article: Negotiators report progress on long-delayed COVID aid bill

McConnell is playing a strong hand in the lame-duck session and is pressuring Democrats to drop a much-sought $160 billion state and local government aid package. McConnell says he'll drop a demand for provisions shielding businesses from COVID-19-related lawsuits, a key priority, if Democrats agree to drop the $160 billion state and local aid package. “We’ve got to get people a lifeline.”Manchin is an architect of a bipartisan $748 billion aid package that is aimed at serving as a template for the leadership talks. A state and local aid package was part of the almost $2 trillion CARES Act that passed the Senate unanimously in March. The $150 billion aid package to states and large cities evoked little controversy then, but many Republicans are adamantly against the idea now, though any additional aid would also go to smaller municipalities left out of the prior round.

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Crunch time for COVID-19 relief as bipartisan bills unveiled

Read full article: Crunch time for COVID-19 relief as bipartisan bills unveiled

Scott Applewhite)WASHINGTON – A bipartisan group of lawmakers was unveiling a detailed COVID-19 aid proposal Monday as Congress labored toward a final agreement on a new round of virus relief. The dozen or so lawmakers sealed agreement on their COVID relief plan over the weekend and decided to offer two bills. One is a $748 billion aid package containing money for struggling businesses, the unemployed, schools, and for vaccine distribution. The other bill proposes a $160 billion aid package for state and local governments and provisions shielding businesses from COVID-related lawsuits, a dynamic favored by Senate Republicans. At issue are two long-delayed pillars of Capitol Hill's agenda under divided government — COVID-19 relief and the annual appropriations process by which Congress passes day-to-day agency funding bills.

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Senate sends Trump defense bill he has vowed to veto

Read full article: Senate sends Trump defense bill he has vowed to veto

Trump has vowed to veto the bill unless lawmakers impose limits on social media companies he claims were biased against him during the election. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, in a rare break with Trump, urged passage of the measure despite Trump's threat to veto it. The Democratic-controlled House overwhelmingly approved the defense bill on Tuesday, defying Trump’s veto threat and setting up a possible showdown with the Republican president in the waning days of his administration. It follows Trump’s bid over the summer to sabotage the package with a veto threat over Confederate base names. If he does veto the defense bill, Congress could cut short its Christmas recess to hold override votes.

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Sen. Rand Paul delays defense bill vote over troop drawdowns

Read full article: Sen. Rand Paul delays defense bill vote over troop drawdowns

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, speaks during a news conference following a weekly meeting with the Senate Republican caucus, Tuesday, Dec. 8. Paul said he would drop his objection if GOP leaders allowed a final vote on the National Defense Authorization Act on Monday. 2 Senate Republican, said he thought Paul — who has provoked government shutdowns before — was using the time-crunch for maximum leverage to remove the provision on troop withdrawals. A procedural vote on the defense bill was expected Friday, setting the stage for final votes on the defense bill and the stopgap spending measure later in the day. If he does veto the defense bill, Congress could cut short its Christmas recess to hold override votes, senior House members said.

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House approves defense policy bill with a veto-proof margin

Read full article: House approves defense policy bill with a veto-proof margin

The measure guides Pentagon policy and cements decisions about troop levels, new weapons systems and military readiness, military personnel policy and other military goals. It follows Trump's bid to sabotage the package with an earlier veto threat over Confederate base names. If he does veto the defense bill, Congress could cut short its Christmas recess to hold override votes, senior House members said. And I think he will get substantial pressure, advice (from Republicans) that, you know, you don’t want to put the defense bill at risk.'' The defense bill is typically a widely bipartisan measure, one of the few areas of common ground.

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The Latest: Biden says he plans to name Austin defense chief

Read full article: The Latest: Biden says he plans to name Austin defense chief

WASHINGTON – The Latest on President-elect Joe Biden (all times local):4:20 p.m.President-elect Joe Biden is confirming that he will nominate retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin to be secretary of defense. And he wrote that Austin knows that the secretary of defense has a different set of responsibilities than a military officer. ___HERE'S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PRESIDENT-ELECT JOE BIDEN'S TRANSITION TO THE WHITE HOUSE:President-elect Joe Biden will nominate retired four-star Army general Lloyd J. Austin to be secretary of defense, according to four people familiar with the decision. Those pledges came even as Biden struck a somber tone about the toll the coronavirus has already taken. The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies is being prevented from publicly announcing its plans for President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20.

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New White House offer adds $600 checks to COVID-19 relief

Read full article: New White House offer adds $600 checks to COVID-19 relief

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin made the offer to Pelosi late Tuesday afternoon, he said in a statement. Mnuchin reached out to Pelosi after a call with top congressional GOP leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who remains at odds with Democratic leaders over COVID-19 relief. The $916 billion Mnuchin offer, the separate ongoing talks among key rank-and-file senators, and the shifting demands by the White House all add up to muddled, confusing prospects for a long-delayed COVID-19 aid package. McConnell said Congress will not adjourn without providing the long-overdue COVID-19 relief. Pelosi blasted McConnell's offer as an attempt to undercut the bipartisan group whose framework she supports as a foundation for the negotiations.

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Virus talks drag on liability as Congress preps stopgap aid

Read full article: Virus talks drag on liability as Congress preps stopgap aid

WASHINGTON – Lawmakers are giving themselves more time to sort through their end-of-session business on government spending and COVID-19 relief, preparing a one-week stopgap spending bill that would prevent a shutdown this weekend. House floor leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said on Twitter that the temporary government funding bill is slated for a vote on Wednesday, when it is sure to easily pass. Disagreements flared Monday over one key provision — a proposed liability shield from COVID-19-related lawsuits for businesses, schools and organizations that reopen. Republicans initially proposed a sweeping five-year liability shield, retroactive to December 2019, to protect companies and organizations from COVID-19-related lawsuits. Negotiators suggested a scaled-back liability shield, but a six-month proposal was panned by Republicans and there is no agreement yet from Democrats.

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COVID-19 relief: What's on the table as Congress seeks deal

Read full article: COVID-19 relief: What's on the table as Congress seeks deal

The duo were the architects of the $1.8 trillion CARES Act, the landmark relief bill passed in March. Here are the top issues for the end-stage COVID-19 relief talks. ___JOBLESS BENEFITSThe CARES Act created a $600 per-week bonus COVID-19 unemployment benefit that sustained household incomes and consumer demand during the springtime shutdowns. House Democrats support the idea, but it is unpopular with many Senate Republicans and was left out of a scaled-back Senate GOP plan. ___LIABILITY SHIELDBusinesses reopening during the pandemic have for months been seeking a shield against lawsuits claiming negligence for COVID-19 outbreaks.

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Optimism growing for COVID relief bill as pressure builds

Read full article: Optimism growing for COVID relief bill as pressure builds

I think we’re both interested in getting an outcome, both on the omnibus and on a coronavirus package,” McConnell said. Some conservatives, including Republicans from COVID hotspots like North Dakota and Iowa, said they were comfortable with an aid package carrying the almost $1 trillion price tag. Added Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.: “There’s a bipartisan package for $908 billion that will really help people." Biden is supporting an additional aid package that's as large as possible now. Any relief package would be attached to a $1.4 trillion year-end spending bill required to avert a government shutdown next weekend.

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The Latest: Trump, US agency allow formal Biden transition

Read full article: The Latest: Trump, US agency allow formal Biden transition

WASHINGTON – The Latest on President-elect Joe Biden (all times local):8 p.m. The General Services Administration has formally designated President-elect Joe Biden as the “apparent winner” of the Nov. 3 election. ___3:30 p.m.President-elect Joe Biden says he wants to work closely with the nation’s mayors to help Americans cope during the coronavirus pandemic. Haines, 51, was the White House deputy national security adviser during the Obama administration. About a dozen other senior White House staffers also have been announced by the president-elect.

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Dems nominate Pelosi as speaker again to lead into Biden era

Read full article: Dems nominate Pelosi as speaker again to lead into Biden era

Against that backdrop, many House Democrats have for years impatiently insisted it's time for fresh leadership. To become speaker again, Pelosi will need more votes than House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who’s likely to garner nearly unanimous GOP support. Though she's likely to succeed, it won’t be simple because when Pelosi was elected speaker in January 2019, 15 Democrats opposed her. Pelosi came to Congress in 1987 and has led House Democrats, both as the minority and majority party, ever since 2003. Pelosi has won wide acclaim among Democrats as a leading Trump foe in battles over impeachment, immigration and health care.

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Americans across party lines, regions embrace marijuana

Read full article: Americans across party lines, regions embrace marijuana

Montana Advanced Caregivers owner Richard Abromeit talks about different strains of marijuana stored in a refrigerator at the Billings, Mont., medical marijuana dispensary on Nov. 11, 2020. Recreational marijuana initiatives passed in four states this year, from liberal New Jersey to conservative Montana and South Dakota. Fifteen states have now broadly legalized it, while 36 states allow medical marijuana. The owner of a chain of medical marijuana dispensaries in Billings, Montana, credited passage of the recreational marijuana initiative to a yearslong campaign by medical marijuana supporters to educate the public about the benefits of cannabis. Chris Nylen, 50, of Flagstaff, Arizona, is a Trump supporter who voted to legalize recreational marijuana.

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Trump, Lee, Tillis: Congress reconsiders testing its own

Read full article: Trump, Lee, Tillis: Congress reconsiders testing its own

Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., became the latest members of Congress to test positive for the virus that has killed more than 205,000 Americans. All three attended the White House Rose Garden introduction Saturday of Trump's nominee for the Supreme Court, Amy Coney Barrett. Nationally and on Capitol Hill, there are no comprehensive plans requiring testing or wearing masks. House members can vote by proxy through their colleagues, to cut down on the number of people milling around. Lee, Tillis and other Republican members of the panel were among those who attended the Rose Garden event on Saturday.

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Democrats to redraft virus relief in bid to jump-start talks

Read full article: Democrats to redraft virus relief in bid to jump-start talks

WASHINGTON – House Democrats are going back to the drawing board on a huge COVID-19 relief bill, paring back the measure in an attempt to jump-start negotiations with the Trump administration. The Democratic-controlled chamber could also pass the $2 trillion-plus measure next week if talks fall through to demonstrate that the party isn't giving up on passing virus relief before the election. The chamber passed a $3.4 trillion rescue measure in May but Republicans dismissed the measure as bloated and unrealistic. Republicans reacted coolly, especially at the prospect of a partisan floor vote if the effort doesn't spark constructive talks. Thursday's developments come as moderate “front line" Democrats in competitive reelection races have been pressing leaders like Pelosi to become more flexible.

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Biden ally Clyburn brings civil rights legacy to DNC

Read full article: Biden ally Clyburn brings civil rights legacy to DNC

FILE - In this Feb. 29, 2020, file photo Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C. listens to Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speak at a primary night election rally in Columbia, S.C. Clyburn is now the highest-ranking Black lawmaker in Congress, the House Democratic Whip, and one of the few leaders of civil rights movement still in elected office today. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

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Biden ally Clyburn brings civil rights legacy to DNC

Read full article: Biden ally Clyburn brings civil rights legacy to DNC

Martin Luther King Jr. as frustrations mounted over civil rights protests in what was becoming a tumultuous, dangerous year. This country moves like a pendulum on the clock, Clyburn told The Associated Press in an interview. Clyburn is pressing many of the same issues he has for decades particularly focusing on Black voting rights ahead of the election. Some Democrats downplay the influence, arguing South Carolina's robust Black electorate was already inclined to vote for Biden. One of Clyburn's longtime colleagues in the civil rights movement and Congress was Lewis, who died in July.

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Ocasio-Cortez rejects GOP colleague's apology in verbal spat

Read full article: Ocasio-Cortez rejects GOP colleague's apology in verbal spat

WASHINGTON A Republican congressman offered an apology Wednesday for the abrupt manner" he used in a verbal confrontation with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez but denied aiming a sexist slur at her. Ocasio-Cortez rejected her colleague's words, saying they were not an apology and what she heard was a vulgar slur. I rise to apologize for the abrupt manner of the conversation I had with my colleague from New York, Yoho said of Monday's encounter. I will not teach my nieces and young people watching that this an apology, and what they should learn to accept. I hope that Mr. Yoho feels that apology sincerely," Hoyer said.

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Apology demanded from GOP lawmaker for Ocasio-Cortez remark

Read full article: Apology demanded from GOP lawmaker for Ocasio-Cortez remark

WASHINGTON A top House Democrat demanded an apology Tuesday from a Republican lawmaker who is accused of using a sexist slur after an angry encounter with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The Hill newspaper said one of its reporters witnessed the confrontation on Monday between Ocasio-Cortez and Florida Rep. Ted Yoho on the steps outside the Capitol. The comments by Yoho were despicable and unacceptable" and require an apology on the House floor, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., told reporters. But hey, b(asterisk)tches get stuff done," she wrote, using one of the words The Hill reported Yoho had used. It is unfortunate that Rep. Ocasio-Cortez is using this exchange to gain personal attention," said Kaveny.

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John Lewis, lion of civil rights and Congress, dies at 80

Read full article: John Lewis, lion of civil rights and Congress, dies at 80

(AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson, File)ATLANTA John Lewis, a lion of the civil rights movement whose bloody beating by Alabama state troopers in 1965 helped galvanize opposition to racial segregation, and who went on to a long and celebrated career in Congress, died. Lewis was the youngest and last survivor of the Big Six civil rights activists, a group led by the Rev. Lewis joined King and four other civil rights leaders in organizing the 1963 March on Washington. Later, when the presidency of Donald Trump challenged his civil rights legacy, Lewis made no effort to hide his pain. If necessary, Im prepared to go to jail.In a speech the day of the House impeachment vote of Trump, Lewis explained the importance of that vote.

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Remembering John Lewis, rights icon and `American hero'

Read full article: Remembering John Lewis, rights icon and `American hero'

FILE - In this Thursday, May 10, 2007 file photo, U.S. Rep. John Lewis, R-Ga., in his office on Capitol Hill, in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)WASHINGTON People paid great heed to John Lewis for much of his life in the civil rights movement. A son of Alabama sharecroppers, the young Lewis first preached moral righteousness to his familys chickens. If that speech marked a turning point in the civil rights era or at least the most famous moment the struggle was far from over. He scaled back criticism of President John Kennedys civil rights record.

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Religious faith was a lifelong constant for Rep. John Lewis

Read full article: Religious faith was a lifelong constant for Rep. John Lewis

FILE - In this Friday, March 5, 1999, file photo, U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., speaks with reporters in Washington. (AP Photo/Khue Bui, File)BIRMINGHAM, Ala. From his childhood, when he preached to chickens in the dirt-poor South, to his decades as a moral force in Congress, religious faith was a constant in the life of Rep. John Lewis. Lewis spent boyhood days as a make-believe minister, preaching to a congregation of clucking birds at his rural home in Alabama. Martin Luther King Jr., he went on to become a civil rights activist in his own right while attending a Baptist college in Tennessee. In my estimation, the civil rights movement was a religious phenomenon.

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Trump faces pressure over Russia bounties to kill US troops

Read full article: Trump faces pressure over Russia bounties to kill US troops

Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and a small group of other House Democrats met with White House officials as Trump downplayed the allegations. One official said the administration discussed several potential responses, but the White House has yet to authorize any. Intelligence officials told the AP that the White House first became aware of alleged Russian bounties in early 2019 a year earlier than had been previously reported. Bolton declined to comment on that matter, and the White House did not respond to questions. The intelligence officials and others with knowledge of the matter insisted on anonymity to discuss the highly sensitive matter.

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House moves to approve DC statehood; Senate GOP opposes

Read full article: House moves to approve DC statehood; Senate GOP opposes

Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., speaks at a news conference on District of Columbia statehood on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Md. will hold a vote on D.C. statehood on July 26. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

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House moves to approve DC statehood; Senate GOP opposes

Read full article: House moves to approve DC statehood; Senate GOP opposes

will hold a vote on D.C. statehood on July 26. Or Congress can live up to this nations promise and ideals, end taxation without representation and pass the statehood bill. The House vote would mark the first time a chamber of Congress has passed a D.C. statehood bill, but the legislation faces insurmountable opposition in the GOP-controlled Senate. In a Senate speech, he dismissed Washington, D.C., as a city with little more to offer than lobbyists and federal workers. In other words, Wyoming is a well-rounded working-class state.Cotton also criticized Democrats for prioritizing the D.C. statehood vote while there is mob violence in the streets.

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House to vote to make Washington DC the 51st state

Read full article: House to vote to make Washington DC the 51st state

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., right, and District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser, left, arrive for a news conference on D.C. statehood on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)WASHINGTON Democrats controlling the House have slated a vote next week to make the District of Columbia the 51st state, an issue that they say has become far more important in the aftermath of protests for racial justice in both Washington and across the nation. Next Fridays vote, if successful, would pass a D.C. statehood bill for the first time in the House, but the legislation faces insurmountable opposition in the GOP-controlled Senate. In 1993, the Democratic-controlled Congress defeated a D.C. statehood bill by an almost 2-1 margin. There shouldn't be troops from other states in Washington, D.C., said Mayor Muriel Bowser.

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