Senate, Democrats and a shutdown
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USA TODAY |
Democrats faced criticism for either choice, USA TODAY reported.
Yahoo |
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney on Wednesday vowed to counter tariffs imposed by the Trump administration.
U.S. News & World Report |
Collins said in a speech to the Senate on Wednesday that Trump's proposed Canadian tariffs would hurt several industries in her home state of Maine, including its paper makers, which obtain pulp via ...
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It's up to the Senate to pass the spending bill and get it to President Donald Trump’s desk to avert a possible government shutdown.
LA Times on MSN19d
Senate passes six-month funding bill hours before shutdown deadlineThe legislation before the Senate is the third such continuing resolution for the current fiscal year, now nearly half over. The legislation would fund the federal government through the end of September. It would trim non-defense spending by about $13 ...
Congress reconvenes this week to discuss the details of President Donald Trump's agenda, including a big tax cut and the 2026 budget.
Moments after the U.S. Senate approved a continuing resolution (CR) to avert a government shutdown, it passed a bipartisan bill to prevent devastating cuts to D.C.’s budget. The CR effectively ...
Senate Republicans are racing to finalize plans to move a budget blueprint that would finally unlock their ability to move ahead with Trump’s agenda in one massive policy bill.
As the District leaders' budget battle continues on Capitol Hill, the timeline for D.C.'s future budgets is in limbo.
Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser is waiting until Congress resolves the fiscal 2025 funding gap for the district before she reveals her budget proposal for fiscal year 2026. In the continuing resolution passed earlier this month to avert a government shutdown,
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Daily Caller on MSNSenate Dem Doubles Down Attacking GOP Budget For Something His Own Party Says Can’t HappenDemocratic Delaware Sen. Chris Coons is continuing to insist that GOP lawmakers are seeking to make entitlement program cuts that a fellow Democrat says is not possible. Coons suggested Tuesday that Republican lawmakers are working to slash Social Security benefits in the sweeping tax and spending bill Congress is currently negotiating.