To save taxpayer money and rebuild the economy, Congress should repeal Biden's poorly named Inflation Reduction Act
The return of President Donald Trump, alongside a Republican-controlled Congress, raises a critical question: Will the Inflation Reduction Act be killed or merely maimed? The answer lies with those GOP representatives; specifically, 32 of them.
As they gather this week at President Donald Trump's Miami resort, House Republicans face a host of tough decisions.
President Donald Trump’s administration issued a memo Monday ordering widespread federal assistance to be temporarily paused, as Trump and his allies have argued he can block government funds that Congress has already authorized, despite a federal law forbidding it.
Despite all the discussion of spending cuts under the new unified GOP control in Washington, two words that President Trump did not utter even
Surging long-term interest rates and stubborn inflation are inflaming divisions among congressional Republicans over paying for the sweeping tax cuts Donald Trump promised, complicating the path to passage with the party’s already tenuous majority.
Scott Bessent on Monday secured confirmation to lead the Department of the Treasury, putting President Trump’s top economic nominee in place ahead of a daunting GOP push to enact Trump’s
New York Republican leaders hope Donald Trump’s second term boosts their chances in the 2026 gubernatorial race. GOP chair Ed Cox believes Trump’s focus on border security, tax reform, and inflation could build momentum, especially if he delivers on promises like lifting the SALT cap and opposing congestion pricing.
Republicans generally expected higher inflation than Democrats throughout President Joe Biden ’s presidency, according to the University of Michigan’s monthly consumer sentiment survey. Still, from mid-2021 on, members of both parties said they thought prices would climb faster than the Federal Reserve’s annual target of 2 percent.
Vermont leaders in Washington are urging the Trump administration not to roll back efforts that make medications less expensive.
Donald Trump has successfully blurred the lines between Republicans and Democrats by stealing their playbooks on issues such as tariffs, the debt limit, tax policy and domestic policy, and