Lindsey McPherson is a Capitol Hill reporter for The Washington Times. She previously covered Congress for other DC-based outlets, including The Messenger, Roll Call and Tax Notes. McPherson graduated from the University of Maryland College Park and spent the early years of her career covering local politics for Maryland newspapers like the Howard County Times and Laurel Leader. She can be reached at lmcpherson@washingtontimes.com.
House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris told The Washington Times that he and other fiscal hard-liners are willing to support a stopgap bill continuing government funding at Biden administration levels because they know President Trump won't spend it all.
Legislation to repeal a Biden administration rule adding costs to offshore drilling is on its way to President Trump's desk as Republicans continue an aggressive pace of votes to roll back the regulatory state.
House Democrats on Wednesday failed to derail a censure resolution against Rep. Al Green, who was ejected from President Trump's address to Congress for disrupting the speech.
Elon Musk, the head of the new Department of Government Efficiency, asked Senate Republicans to codify the cuts that he and his cohorts are making to the federal bureaucracy.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said his GOP majority is likely to censure Democratic Rep. Al Green for disrupting President Trump's joint address to Congress.
President Trump in his address to Congress on Tuesday revived a campaign pitch to create a tax deduction for interest payments on car loans, amid a broader push for sweeping tax cuts.
President Trump will meet Wednesday with a group of House Republicans who are not on board with GOP leaders' plan for funding the government, in hopes of unifying the party and ensuring Democrats will be blamed if there is a shutdown.
House Republicans' coming stopgap spending bill extending last year's government funding levels through the end of September will not include any savings the new Department of Government Efficiency says it has found in the first two months of the Trump administration.
Top congressional Republicans appear united on a plan to advance another stopgap funding bill to keep the government open from March 14 through Sept. 30 as negotiations on new spending bills have stalled over Democratic demands.
The Senate cleared legislation Thursday that would repeal a Biden administration regulation charging oil and gas producers a fee on methane emission leaks for President Trump's signature.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said the Republican-led Congress is unlikely to pass new spending bills for the current fiscal year because of "unreasonable" demands that Democrats have made in ongoing government funding negotiations.
The House GOP on Wednesday took the first step in its plan to dismantle a plethora of energy policies from the Biden administration, part of a broader push by congressional Republicans to roll back swathes of energy-related regulations.
Senate Republicans are planning changes to the House budget plan that was meticulously negotiated to earn the support of nearly every GOP lawmaker in the lower chamber, with a key focus on ensuring a permanent extension of President Trump's first-term tax cuts.