House Speaker Mike Johnson has formed a select subcommittee to further investigate the Jan. 6, 2021, assaults on the U.S. Capitol, while Rep. Barry Loudermilk has released an interim report on the
Va., will serve as the new vice chairman on the powerful House Committee on Rules for the 119th Congress. Griffith, who represents Virginia's 9th Congressional District in the House, was appointed to the committee last week by House Speaker Mike Johnson.
Speaker Mike Johnson said the subcommittee would "continue our efforts to uncover the full truth" about the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
President Donald Trump's Inauguration Day speeches were punctuated by several false or misleading claims, many of which he has made before.
The alliance between Speaker Mike Johnson and President-elect Donald Trump may prove to be the most important relationship in Washington.
Speaking to the three top House Republican leaders over the past three days at the House GOP retreat here in Doral, Fla., revealed how President Trump is both the glue holding the fragile majority
Mike Johnson to create new Jan. 6 committee despite vowing to look ‘forward’ - The subcommittee will look at some of the “intelligence failures” that were found in connection to the Jan 6 attacks
Johnson is tasked with passing Trump's agenda through Congress with only a one-vote Republican majority in the House.
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) views his role as a "junior partner" to President Donald Trump — and in so doing, he is undermining the power of Congress as a co-equal branch of government, The New York Times reported.
Speaker Mike Johnson’s power within the Republican Party is about to be tested unlike anything he has faced, with Donald Trump’s agenda on the line.
The 119th United States Congress is the current meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives. New members were elected on November 5, 2024. The 119th Congress convened on ...
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Wednesday backed the Trump administration’s decision to offer buyouts to federal workers who do not plan to return to the office, telling reporters that “drastic