Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Congressional staff are employees of the United States Congress or individual members of Congress. The position first developed in the late 19th century, and it expanded significantly during the 20th century. Staffers may work with individual members of Congress, or they may be associated with committees or other organizations that support ...
Compiled under the direction of O. M. Enyart, this was the first volume prepared by congressional staff who drew on the Lanman and Poore editions as well as biographical information printed in the Congressional Directory since the 40th United States Congress (1867).
Deputy chief of staff to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland: 1985 Alaska at-large: Nick Begich III (R) Yes Defeated Mary Peltola (D) Software businessman Alaska Policy Forum Board 1977 Arizona 3: Yassamin Ansari (D) No Open seat; replacing Ruben Gallego (D) Phoenix City Council: 1992 Arizona 8: Abraham Hamadeh (R) No Open seat; replacing ...
The foreword notes: The Congressional Directory is one of the oldest working handbooks within the United States Government. While there were unofficial directories for Congress in one form or another beginning with the 1st Congress in 1789, the Congressional Directory published in 1847 for the 30th Congress is considered by scholars and historians to be the first official edition because it ...
In congressional parlance, Officers sometimes includes both Employees and Elected congressional leaders. For purposes of organization here, however, Officers means leaders, who are elected Senators or Representatives, not employees.
In this 2018 photo, congressional staffers eat by the reflecting pool in Washington, DC. (Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images) A version of this story appeared in CNN’s What Matters newsletter.
This glaring lack of diversity is the catalyst for the Joint Center’s congressional hiring campaign, which launched this month to track the racial makeup of top staff hires of newly elected and ...
Congress.gov is the online database of United States Congress legislative information. Congress.gov is a joint project of the Library of Congress, the House, the Senate and the Government Publishing Office. [1] Congress.gov was in beta in 2012, and beta testing ended in late 2013. [1]