(The Center Square) – Republican U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx of North Carolina will serve as chairwoman of the Committee on Rules for the 119th Congress. Foxx, of the 5th Congressional District in ...
Rep. Virginia Foxx was appointed by House Speaker Mike Johnson to lead the House Committee on Rules, making her the only woman leading a committee in the current session of Congress.
The House GOP's membership vote took place earlier that morning for the House Rules Committee, with North Carolina Republican Rep. Virginia Foxx taking over as its new chair. Rep. Morgan Griffith ...
On Tuesday morning, House Speaker Mike Johnson announced he chose Foxx to lead the House Committee on Rules. This makes ... She represents North Carolina’s 5th Congressional District which ...
Virginia Foxx of North Carolina will serve as chairwoman ... and honored to have been selected as Chairwoman of the House Rules Committee – and I thank Speaker Johnson for placing his trust ...
On Tuesday morning, House Speaker Mike Johnson announced he chose Foxx to lead the House Committee on Rules. This makes her the only woman leading a House committee in the 119th Congress. “For two decades, Dr. Foxx has been a stalwart in the House and a ...
North Carolina Rep. Virginia Foxx's appointment signals that Trump and Republicans in Congress will push the most radical versions of their agenda.
North Carolina Appeals Court Judge Jefferson Griffin's legal effort to contest his electoral loss in the state's tight Supreme Court race, in which he trails incumbent Justice Allison Riggs by just over 700 votes,
Here's how North Carolina members of Congress voted over the previous week. Along with this week's roll call votes, the House also passed, by voice vote, a bill (H.R. 189), to eliminate the general office space leasing authority of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A settlement has been reached by North Carolina's Insurance Department and the industry that sells homeowner policies.
On Thursday, new U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson appointed Virginia Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-9th) to the House Committee on Rules for the 119th Congress, where he will serve as vice-chair.
Changes in the classroom and on the street could reduce misconduct allegations, lawyers tell N.C. Association of Chiefs of Police.