Campaigns · 119th Congress
Juliana Stratton wins Democratic primary for Durbin’s seat
Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton won the Democratic primary Tuesday in the race to succeed retiring Sen. Richard J. Durbin.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton won the Democratic primary Tuesday in the race to succeed retiring Sen. Richard J. Durbin.
Montanan's congressional terms bookended tenure as Interior Secretary during Trump's first term in the White House.
s surprise when she told the Georgia Democrat she faced two primary opponents.↵↵"He said, 'Why are they primarying you?' I said, 'Well, they're primarying me from the left,"' DeLauro said.
Ayanna S. Pressley and Newark Mayor Ras Baraka.↵↵Mejia said her campaign has held town halls that have also served as trainings for how to interact with ICE officers.
s already limited autonomy.↵↵Recently, Norton has appeared to struggle through prepared remarks.
Starting gate↵↵Church and state: As Democrats look beyond 2024's bruising defeats, some candidates are challenging the idea that religion has no place in an increasingly secular party.
California's redistricting turned Republican Ken Calvert's seat blue, so he'll run in an adjoining district held by GOP incumbent Young Kim.
“This is a very different moment than March,” Connecticut Democrat Christopher S. Murphy told reporters. “I acknowledge that the call in March was tough for a lot of my colleagues.
D.C.’s delegate: Our colleague Justin Papp reports on the emerging Democratic primary for the District of Columbia’s nonvoting delegate in Congress as the longtime incumbent, Eleanor Holmes Norton
District delegate: Democratic strategist Donna Brazile, who was chief of staff to D.C.’s nonvoting delegate, Eleanor Holmes Norton, in the 1990s, writes in The Washington Post that the longtime lawmaker
Donald S. Beyer Jr. and former Rep. Jennifer Wexton, both ex-colleagues of Connolly’s from neighboring districts, as well as the center-left New Democrat Coalition Action Fund.
Brian Schatz of Hawaii, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Christopher S. Murphy of Connecticut.
Perhaps most telling of all, 49 percent of respondents claim to believe the S&P 500 is down for the year. It’s not. It closed Wednesday up almost 12 percent on the year. What’s next for Norman?
Christopher S. Murphy challenged: Republican Matthew Corey announced this week that he’s making another run against the Connecticut Democrat.
Christopher S. Murphy, D-Conn., told CNN’s Jake Tapper.
The only Republicans in the Senate for all six of those years who disagreed with their party more often were Mark S.
Davis of Illinois and Republican John Carter of Texas, 81; and Democrat Frederica S. Wilson of Florida, who is 80 and about two weeks older than Biden.
“I thought I was hot s—,” he said. The following year, he ran a state Senate campaign and lost. After the results came in, he called a political friend.