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.
Virginia Foxx of North Carolina will serve as chairwoman of the House of Representatives' Committee on Rules for the 119th Congress. Foxx, of the 5th Congressional District in the northwestern ...
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 ...
(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 ...
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 ...
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 House Speaker Destin Hall unveiled committee chairs for the 2025-2026 legislative session. Committee memberships and vice-chairmanships will be announced in
U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson appointed Congressman Morgan Griffith (R-VA) to the House Committee on Rules for the 119th Congress. Following this announcement, House Committee on
All but one state House Republican from the Triad and northwest North Carolina have been appointed as a committee chairperson for the 2025-26 legislative session by Speaker Destin Hall.
There are still some unresolved races from the 2024 election, and one of them involves a seat on North Carolina’s highest court.
North Carolina lawmakers introduced legislation in Congress Wednesday that would allow the victims of felonies committed by undocumented immigrants to sue cities, counties, and states that did not comply with ICE deportation orders.
North Carolina's Supreme Court dismissed a request by the trailing Jefferson Griffin to rule now on whether 60,000+ ballots should be tossed.