The Center Square) – Fed up with Democrats slow-walking the process of confirming President Donald Trump’s civilian nominees, Republicans will permanently change Senate voting rules as soon as Thursday.
(The Center Square) – With less than three weeks until the federal government runs out of money, congressional Republicans are hoping Democrats will agree to passing at least three of 12 appropriations bills, supplemented by a “clean” funding stopgap.
(The Center Square) – States are gearing up to deliver more votes for their favored political parties in a rare, mid-decade overhaul of voting maps that threatens to frustrate voters ahead of the 2026 midterms.
(The Center Square) – All but three of Colorado’s U.S. congressional members received a failing grade on a new report, which examined how their voting records align with “biblical based positions.”
(The Center Square) — The national Republican Party is joining the Trump administration's effort to get Maine to turn over voter registration data, calling on the Department of Justice to investigate Democratic Secretary of State Shenna Bellows for alleged violations of federal law.
(The Center Square) – U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi warned states and school boards on Tuesday not to trample the rights of parents when they speak out about education issues in a memo.
(The Center Square) - The U.S. Department of Education will issue new guidance on prayer in public schools, according to President Donald Trump in his speech at the Bible Museum this week.
(The Center Square) – Exactly three weeks until the federal government runs out of funds, top Democrats and Republicans finally appear united on a general course of action to avert a shutdown.
(The Center Square) — Maine's top election official has rejected another request from the Trump administration to turn over the state's voter registration data, criticizing the demands as a "fishing expedition" that would compromise voters' personal information.
(The Center Square) – With 26 days until the federal government runs out of money, top appropriators have narrowed in on their preferred funding gameplan: push the equivalent of the Senate’s three-bill minibus through the House, then let a Continuing Resolution temporarily cover the rest.