Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has selected Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) to serve as chair of the House Rules Committee, installing the veteran lawmaker at the helm of the panel that will play a key
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.
Johnson chose Foxx to succeed now-retired Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas). Unlike most other House committees, the Rules gavel is chosen solely at the discretion of the speaker — a recognition of the panel’s key role in managing business on the House floor.
Massie, the lone Republican to vote against Johnson’s speakership bid Jan. 3, revealed in December that he had offered to step down from the panel.
Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-5th, bills herself as "tougher than a $2 steak" following a fall in the Capitol.She'll need a thick skin following her appointment this week to a powerful
The Republican’s predecessor had stocked the influential Rules Committee with conservatives. It looks different now.
Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) was confirmed as the new chairwoman of the House Rules Committee, a powerful panel that decides if and how legislation is brought to the floor for votes.
U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx (NC-05) will chair the House Rules Committee for the 119th Congress, the House GOP conference confirmed recently.
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.
After Donald Trump takes the oath of office and Congress concludes the inaugural pageantry, the Senate will get back to work.
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.
North Carolina Rep. Virginia Foxx's appointment signals that Trump and Republicans in Congress will push the most radical versions of their agenda.