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Chad Pergram covers Congress for FOX News. He's earned an Edward R. Murrow Award and the Joan S. Barone Award for his reporting on Capitol Hill.

Not many people know much about the ethics process in the House of Representatives. It's a confusing maze of subcommittees and outside panels. Chad Pergram decodes it with this Hitchhiker's Guide

Democrats are worried that ethics scandals could infect many of them this year. Even if they aren't implicated in any potential wrongdoing. Call it a case of "ethics cooties."

The political careers of Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) and the late-Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) share numerous parallels.

The House comes back for an abbreviated session today. Right in the middle of the August recess.

Only on Capitol Hill can you go to singing "School's Out" by Alice Cooper to "Cruel Summer" by Bananarama in a matter of moments.

The Kansas GOP Senate contest is a race about trying to court conservatives. So much so that two candidates may have trouble making a left at an intersection.

There's quite a lexicon out there surrounding the Rangel investigation. Especially words that aren't said at all.

Two, tiny, round holes in the door of a House Ways and Means Committee office in the U.S. Capitol speak volumes about the midterm elections and future of Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY).

The timing of a major ethics announcement concerning embattled Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) couldn't have come at a worse time for House Democrats.

One lawmaker thinks honoring athletic teams in Congress is a waste of time.

When it comes to solving disputes on Capitol Hill, Congress should steal a page from the World Cup's playbook and resort to penalty kicks.

The proliferation of hand-hand cameras and flip-phones is suddenly taking politicians outside their comfort zones. And we're seeing them for what they are: human beings.

Congress is a lot like high school. Especially when the bells ring and everyone has to go to their locker. Er, I mean the House floor to vote.

The House didn't vote Thursday to fund the war in Afghanistan. But it did vote on a bunch of other things.

When the late-Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV) took the floor, he made the Senate "must see TV."