Forty-nine House Republicans and a dozen senators have never voted for a law to raise the debt limit, highlighting issues the small GOP majorities could face enacting their agenda.
House Republicans are looking anywhere and everywhere to find the money to pay for Donald Trump's corporate tax cuts and expensive immigration crackdown. Plus - on just the fourth day of Trump's second term,
Republicans in Congress have control of both chambers, but several members are already hinting at running for governor in 2026.
The pardons are a culmination of Trump’s yearslong campaign to rewrite the history of the Jan. 6 attack, which left more than 100 police officers injured as the angry mob of Trump supporters — some armed with poles, bats and bear spray — overwhelmed law enforcement, shattered windows and sent lawmakers and aides running into hiding.
Texas, on Wednesday published a 47-page report titled “The Case for Healthcare Freedom" as a roadmap to "Make American Healthy Again."
Trump has worn his party down, and few events crystallize it like the GOP’s muted — and, in some cases, positive — response.
U.S. District Judge John Coughenour, appointed by former President Ronald Reagan, signed the temporary restraining order on Thursday to block Trump’s action. Coughenour’s decision just days after a number of states, including New Jersey, sued the Trump administration over the move.
The Republicans are trying to quickly act on the president’s tax and border agenda, but they haven’t agreed on how to do so.
That's one of the big takeaways from POLITICO Playbook’s First 100 Days: Tax Reform event, where a trio of lawmakers who discussed the GOP push for tax cuts.
Republicans in statehouses are emboldened by GOP electoral successes to push a new wave of bills to restrict transgender rights and gender-affirming care