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WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) joined Congressman John Curtis (R-UT) and more than 50 members of Congress to launch the new Conservative Climate Caucus.
On May 30, 2021, the world’s largest meat packer, JBS S.A., was the target of a ransomware cyber-attack that forced operations to cease at all of their beef processing plants in the United States, causing significant disruption in the supply chain.
WASHINGTON – Congressman Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) and Congresswoman Madeline Dean (D-PA), along with 31 of their colleagues, introduced the bipartisan SECURE Notarization Act of 2021, which will update and modernize the notarization process in and outside of the United States.
Original Publication: The Hill
By Congressman Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) and National Association of Conservation Districts President Michael Crowder
WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) spoke on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, congratulating the Dickinson High School girls softball team for winning the 2021 North Dakota Class A State Championship. This is their first state championship in program history. Armstrong is a Dickinson native, and graduate of Dickinson High School.
WASHINGTON – Congressman Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) received the American Conservative Union Foundation's (ACUF) Award for Conservative Achievement in recognition of his voting record during the 116th Congress.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Senate is reconvening in Washington Monday, but the House of Representatives won't be there.
These decisions may stray from what many would've expected.
The House came back to vote in-person just a week and a half ago, but now won't be reconvening in D.C.
Lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee called on Amazon.com Inc. Chairman and CEO Jeff Bezos to testify on its private-label practices, citing a Wall Street Journal investigation that found Amazon employees used data about independent sellers on its platform to develop competing products.
The Paycheck Protection Program ran out of funds in its first two weeks, leaving many small businesses out.
Now, lawmakers have allocated an additional $320 billion to the program.
The nearly $350 billion Paycheck Protection Program funds started going out about two weeks ago.
But federal government leaders say businesses have already asked for all of that money.
