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The Senate Judiciary Committee is holding a hearing Tuesday morning to consider legislation that would permanently classify fentanyl-related substances as a Schedule 1 drug under the Controlled ...
Here's a look at the schedule for Senate hearings set so far, in Eastern time: Tuesday. 10 a.m.: Doug Collins, Department of Veterans Affairs. The former Georgia congressman goes before the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee. Collins is a Baptist minister, former Navy chaplain and Air Force Reserve colonel.
The former New York congressman appears before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. The agency is tasked with matters pertaining to environmental protection, conducting assessments, research, education and maintaining and enforcing national standards. 10:15 a.m.: Bondi, Day 2 before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Senate hearings are scheduled this week for several of Trump's picks for the Cabinet. Many nominees have met with senators individually. Now, they will go before the committees overseeing the agencies that Trump wants them to run. A hearing began Tuesday for Pete Hegseth, Trump’s pick for defense secretary.
Here's a look at the schedule for some of the Senate hearings, in Eastern time: Wednesday. 10 a.m.: Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Heath and Human Services . Kennedy ran for president as a Democrat, then as an independent before he dropped out and endorsed Trump.
Here's a look at the schedule for some of the Senate hearings: Wednesday. 10 a.m. EST: Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Department of Labor . The former Republican congresswoman from Oregon narrowly lost reelection last year but had received strong backing from union members in her district.
USA TODAY is streaming the hearings which can be viewed at the top of this story. The first hearing, hosted by the Senate finance committee, begins at 10 a.m. Wednesday and will be streamed on the ...
Unlike the documents and reports that are compiled in the Serial Set "hearings do not constitute a real series" [4] although in the modern era a trend toward uniformity of numbering has resulted in all Senate hearings and prints for each Congressional Session (commencing with the 98th Congress in 1983) being assigned a unique numerical ...