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Congress is celebrating after both the House and the Senate passed a short-term funding bill known as a continuing resolution. While continuing resolutions never ideal, none of us like them.
Some 63% of nursing home residents nationwide rely on Medicaid, which is facing steep cuts from President Trump's spending ...
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are under the gun to approve a short-term spending bill this week to avoid a government shutdown before the holidays. The continuing resolution has to be approved in the ...
U.S. Congressional leaders on Sunday announced a short-term spending bill that would fund government agencies for the next three months, avoiding a potential government shutdown when the new ...
In 2022, Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) to lower drug costs and reduce federal spending. One provision in the law gave Medicare the power to impose price caps on certain brand ...
Congress approved legislation Wednesday for a stopgap spending bill and a $231 million infusion to the Secret Service, heading off a government shutdown and boosting security for presidential ...
Congress on Wednesday passed a temporary measure that keeps government agencies funded into December, avoiding a shutdown for now while punting final spending decisions until after the Nov. 5 ...
Congress on Wednesday gave final approval to a short-term spending bill to avert a government shutdown just ahead of the November elections, sending the legislation to President Biden’s desk but ...
Congress on Wednesday passed a temporary measure that keeps government agencies funded into December, avoiding a shutdown for now while punting final spending decisions until after the Nov. 5 ...
Congress on Wednesday passed a temporary measure that keeps government agencies funded into December, avoiding a shutdown for now while punting final spending decisions until after the Nov. 5 ...
Congress on Wednesday passed a temporary measure that keeps government agencies funded into December, avoiding a shutdown for now while punting final spending decisions until after the Nov. 5 ...
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., billed the measure as doing “only what's absolutely necessary," a statement directed at members of his own conference concerned about spending levels.