In The News
Congressman Fred Keller, R-Pa., heard from representatives of Williams Energy last week during a stop in Wyoming County, also taking an opportunity afterwards to visit a natural gas compressor station.
LEWISBURG — American Legion Post 182 welcomed an audience of more than 100 people Monday night to observe Veterans Day and watch local Boy Scout Troop 538's Court of Honor Ceremony.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The debate over debt-free college caught a local Congressman in the crossfire with one of Congress’s most controversial members.
Rep. Fred Keller (R-Pa.) challenged Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) on who exactly would be paying for the Democrats affordable college plan known as the College Affordability Act. But Keller doesn’t think it’s affordable at all.
BRADFORD COUNTY, PA.(WENY)-- WENY News took an inside look at the Eureka Resources plant Friday morning as officials guided group tours throughout it. The company recently announced that they are in the process of a multimillion dollar expansion which will not only help expand the company, but also bring new jobs and opportunities to the State of Pennsylvania.
LACEYVILLE — Energy was the reason local, state and governmental leaders gathered in the small town of Laceyville on Friday — but what also rose from the conversation between commissioners, farmers, congressmen and community members was a promise that rural America is not forgotten.
Three House members who represent Northeast Pennsylvania split along party lines in the chamber’s first vote on the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump’s conduct. U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser, R-9, Dallas, and Rep. Fred Keller, R-12, Snyder County, voted against opening the inquiry. Rep. Matt Cartwright, D-8, Moosic, voted for it. Here are comments each made on their votes:
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Eight members of the Pennsylvania Republican Congressional Delegation voted unsuccessfully to block Speaker Pelosi and Intelligence Committee Chairman Schiff’s last-minute vote to legitimize the baseless push to impeach President Trump,
Among those who voted against it were U.S. Rep. Glenn Thompson and U.S. Rep. Fred Keller.
Passage in Congress of a procedural vote to start a formal impeachment process into President Donald Trump's actions will only solidify the divide between Republican and Democratic legislators and many Valley voters, political observers said on Thursday.
U.S. Rep. Fred Keller, R-Kreamer, on Thursday blasted House Democrats supporting the resolution outlining the next phase of the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump.
The measure sketches out guidelines for public hearings in the inquiry and the president’s participation in the process.
Pennsylvania’s 18 members of the House of Representatives are evenly divided by party — 9 Democrats and 9 Republicans.
So it’s no surprise that the Keystone lawmakers split evenly Thursday on the vote establishing rules for the House impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. (A new Franklin & Marshall poll suggests the same is true among voters.)
