Stay ahead of the 2024 U.S. elections with POLITICO Pro’s non-partisan, policy-focused intelligence. From President Biden’s clean energy initiatives to pivotal issues like reproductive health and ...
Airlines are again predicting record-breaking travel this summer against the backdrop of a spike in near-collisions on runways, inadequate staffing at airport towers and safety concerns involving ...
The Biden administration has navigated a sometimes uneasy balance of seeding clean energy projects while limiting the growth of fossil fuel production on federal land and waters. But the Inflation ...
The conversation around representation in government has gained momentum, but has the demographic makeup of our leaders, legislators, and judges changed? We pulled together data on the race, sex, ...
Democrats and Republicans are hoping to use the battle over the next farm bill, which has been stalled in Congress for nearly a year, as a way to message to rural voters. A critical vote is coming up ...
Senior lawmakers in both chambers are scrambling to reach a compromise on legislation limiting U.S. investments in China as negotiators are working off a newer version of the draft bill that would ...
Medicare Part D enrollees saved about $400 million on vaccines in 2023 after the Inflation Reduction Act eliminated cost-sharing requirements at the beginning of the year. About 1.5 million Part D ...
California regulators will delay the start of their hotly anticipated cap-and-trade rulemaking to early 2025, the agency confirmed to POLITICO on Thursday, November 14. The California Air Resources ...
Former President Donald Trump said Monday, during a conversation with Elon Musk, that it “doesn’t make sense” why the U.S. compares so poorly to other countries with “unbelievably fast” bullet trains ...
Lawmakers failed to resolve several key defense spending and policy battles ahead of the November elections, leaving unresolved issues that will dominate the upcoming lame-duck session. Chief among ...
President-elect Donald Trump presided over major increases in defense spending during his first term in the White House, but his exact plans for Pentagon spending and military force structure isn’t ...
Both chambers plan to take off most of August for recess and all of October ahead of elections. The House typically convenes for four-day weeks, while the Senate convenes up to five days a week.