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Effects of climate change on farming, federal spending explored by U.S. Senate panel
By: Jennifer Shutt - June 8, 2023
WASHINGTON — U.S. senators on the Budget Committee dug into the impacts of climate change on farming during a Wednesday hearing, raising concerns about what the next few decades hold for food production and the way of life. But Republicans and representatives of farm groups pushed back against increased government regulation. Brent Johnson, president of […]
U.S. Senate sends Biden debt limit legislation ahead of Monday default deadline
By: Jennifer Shutt - June 2, 2023
WASHINGTON — The bipartisan debt limit bill is on its way to President Joe Biden after the U.S. Senate voted Thursday to clear the measure for his signature. The 63-36 vote followed several amendment votes, all of which were rejected. Biden is expected to quickly sign the package, preventing a default on the debt that otherwise would […]
Debt limit deal hits turbulence in Congress as leaders prep for vote
By: Jennifer Shutt and Ariana Figueroa - May 30, 2023
WASHINGTON — Congress began moving the bipartisan debt limit package forward Tuesday, though frustrations with provisions in the bill could make for narrow passage in the U.S. House and U.S. Senate. Conservative Republicans and progressive Democrats both aired their disappointment with the agreement forged over the weekend, but only GOP lawmakers are looking to possibly remove […]
With debt default as soon as a week away, U.S. House jets off for holiday break
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 25, 2023
WASHINGTON — U.S. House members walked down the steps of the Capitol building Thursday morning to head back to their districts for a Memorial Day recess that began exactly one week before the country could default on the debt. House Democrats took to the floor after the final vote of the week to give a […]
Biden says he’s offered $1 trillion in spending cuts but GOP won’t budge on debt limit
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 22, 2023
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Sunday his administration has offered $1 trillion in spending cuts as part of the ongoing talks with Republicans around a budget agreement, but he said no deal has yet been reached. Biden, speaking from Japan during a press conference following the G7 summit, said his administration wants House Speaker Kevin […]
A default on the U.S. debt would be far worse than a government shutdown. Here’s how
By: Jennifer Shutt, Ashley Murray, Jacob Fischler and Ariana Figueroa - May 19, 2023
WASHINGTON — A U.S. default on its debt would have a significantly broader impact on federal operations, financial markets and the global economy than recent government shutdowns that have left ordinary Americans largely untouched. While the two have been confused frequently during debate over the debt limit, the federal government has had considerable practice with […]
Lawmakers debate violence against abortion clinics, anti-abortion pregnancy centers
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 18, 2023
WASHINGTON — Republicans at a U.S. House hearing aired frustration with the Department of Justice this week for what they contended is a lack of enforcement of a Clinton-era law that protects access to reproductive health care at anti-abortion pregnancy centers and abortion clinics. GOP lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee expressed anger the Federal […]
Some movement reported in debt limit talks as Biden cuts short overseas trip
By: Jennifer Shutt and Ashley Murray - May 16, 2023
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and congressional leaders struggled to find common ground on the debt ceiling during a Tuesday meeting, though lawmakers said afterward there was some progress toward a deal. Biden and U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy will become the two primary negotiators on a bipartisan debt limit bill that could include other […]
Arguments on landmark abortion pill case to be heard Wednesday in appeals court
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 16, 2023
WASHINGTON — The lawsuit over access to the abortion pill goes before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on Wednesday, the next step on a path that will likely end at the U.S. Supreme Court. The three-judge panel will decide whether to keep, overturn, or alter a ruling from U.S. District Court from […]
U.S. risks debt default in early June, congressional budget office agrees
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 15, 2023
WASHINGTON — The federal government could default on its debt during the first two weeks of June without action on bipartisan legislation, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The nonpartisan budget scorekeeper issued an updated report Friday, warning that “if the debt limit remains unchanged, there is a significant risk that at some point in the first […]
As the COVID public health emergency ends, prepping for a new pandemic is next
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 11, 2023
WASHINGTON — After more than three years and 1.1 million deaths, the United States on Thursday will end the public health emergency for COVID-19 — and Congress is attempting to better prepare for a possible resurgence of that virus or another. The expiration of the designation, originally put in place in January 2020, means alterations to how […]
U.S. senators press pharma executives on cost of insulin, prescription medications
By: Jennifer Shutt - May 11, 2023
WASHINGTON — U.S. senators sparred with pharmaceutical companies and pharmacy benefit managers during a Wednesday hearing on the costs of insulin and other prescription medications. Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, the top Republican on the panel and a physician, noted that a century ago a diabetes diagnosis was essentially a death sentence for patients before the […]