Author
What to know about Thursday’s public hearing on the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol
By: Jacob Fischler - June 9, 2022
The U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol will launch the first in a series of public hearings Thursday night in the hopes of drawing a major prime-time national television audience. The Democratic-led committee, which includes two Republicans who defied their party leadership to join, has been tight-lipped about […]
First Jan. 6 hearing to reveal new evidence of Trump conspiracy, panel aides say
By: Jacob Fischler - June 9, 2022
The U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol will use its first public hearing to tie the violent attempt to overturn the election directly to former President Donald Trump, committee aides told reporters Wednesday. In addition to live witnesses — a U.S. Capitol Police officer injured by rioters during the […]
Remote voting in the U.S. House hits a second anniversary, but it may be its last
By: Jacob Fischler - May 27, 2022
After two years of a temporary provision to allow remote voting in the U.S. House, the top 36 users of the proxy voting system are all Democrats, though Republicans have also taken advantage of it. Proxy voting was meant to keep crowds of House members smaller and thereby limit the spread of COVID-19, back in […]
Proposal to ban mining near Minnesota’s Boundary Waters sets off battle in Congress
By: Jacob Fischler - May 25, 2022
A U.S. House panel broke along party lines Tuesday as its members debated mining near the most popular wilderness area in the country, following President Joe Biden’s decision earlier this year to block federal approval of a new mine. Democrats on the House Natural Resources Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee said they supported Minnesota U.S. […]
Misinformation, violence and a paper shortage threaten midterm elections, officials say
By: Jacob Fischler - May 20, 2022
Members of a U.S. Senate panel and election administrators raised a bevy of concerns Thursday about the challenges elections officials will face this fall, saying problems ranging from a lack of paper to coordinated misinformation campaigns could affect confidence in U.S. democracy. A bipartisan panel of current and former elections officials and experts told the […]
Congress, White House scramble to ease baby formula shortage
By: Jennifer Shutt and Jacob Fischler - May 20, 2022
WASHINGTON — Both the Biden administration and Congress moved Wednesday to try to relieve a national infant formula shortage, as the White House invoked the Defense Production Act and the U.S. House approved $28 million for the Food and Drug Administration. President Joe Biden said he would use the law to address the formula shortage, […]
U.S. Sens. Tester, Moran reach deal on care for veterans exposed to toxic burn pits
By: Jacob Fischler - May 19, 2022
The two leaders of the U.S. Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Montana Democrat Jon Tester and Kansas Republican Jerry Moran, have reached a deal with House leaders to pass a bill to extend health care access to veterans for conditions related to exposure to toxic chemicals during their service, the pair announced Wednesday. U.S. Senator Tammy […]
Biden condemns racist theory of white supremacy in visit to Buffalo after mass shooting
By: Jacob Fischler - May 18, 2022
President Joe Biden on Tuesday commemorated the victims of last weekend’s mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, and condemned the ideology that drove the killer to “carry out a murderous, racist rampage” at a grocery store in a predominantly Black neighborhood. In a visit to the Upstate New York city, Biden and other New York […]
U.S. House vote to expand federal firefighters benefits seen as step toward parity
By: Jacob Fischler - May 16, 2022
WASHINGTON – Years after firefighters extinguish a blaze, after the smoke has lifted and ashes have cooled, the people who risked their lives to contain the fire face another danger: cancer and cardiovascular disease resulting from exposure to smoke and heat. Government and academic studies have shown firefighters are 9% more likely to develop cancer […]
Biden administration vows to speed up environmental permits needed for infrastructure projects
By: Jacob Fischler - May 11, 2022
President Joe Biden’s administration will seek to hasten construction of roads, bridges, wind farms and more by tweaking the federal review process for environmental and other permits, administration officials said Tuesday. On a press call, administration officials said they were seeking to make permitting easier without sacrificing environmental standards. The new permitting plan includes five […]
Vote on abortion rights planned in U.S. Senate next week, but likely will fall short
By: Jacob Fischler - May 6, 2022
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer will force a vote next week on a bill to codify abortion protections, following the disclosure that the Supreme Court could be ready to overturn a landmark abortion rights ruling, he and other Senate Democrats announced Thursday. The effort appears largely symbolic. Democrats are well short of the 60 […]
Overturning Roe would hand power over abortion to states. Many would ban it.
By: Jacob Fischler and Ariana Figueroa - May 4, 2022
A U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down a nearly 50-year-old right to abortion would lead to strict restrictions or bans by states across nearly half the country almost immediately. The court is poised to overturn the landmark 1973 case Roe v. Wade, as well as a subsequent ruling on fetal viability, according to an initial […]