House Republicans are expecting a 220-215 majority in 2025, an even slimmer lead than they currently hold. In the Senate, ...
With Trump picks leaving vacancies, Republicans could have a 217-215 majority -- the narrowest GOP majority in history -- ...
Overall, 150 women are set to serve in the 119th Congress starting next year, down just slightly from the current record of ...
The fate of Trump’s income tax agenda will be decided in large part by two issues: Trump’s tariffs and how Congress pays for ...
A California Democrat eked out a win in the final outstanding House election race, setting up an even narrower Republican ...
The House and Senate haven’t yet agreed on which legislation to take up first next year under unified Republican control of ...
Further complicating the math for House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is the fact that Trump has chosen two sitting GOP ...
House Republican leaders will brief the press Wednesday morning, as the GOP prepares to transition to full leadership of ...
Sen. John Thune plans to make border security one of his first legislative focuses in 2025, the Republican told colleagues ...
Even though one party will control Congress and the White House, there is still plenty for lawmakers to argue about.
A look at the numbers, and how fraught and riven the next two years could be for President-elect Trump and the GOP.
The last time Republicans held unified control of Congress and the White House in 2017, when they passed their tax package via reconciliation, they held 241 House seats, a significantly wider margin ...