Congress · 119th Congress
Should Jan. 6 be a national holiday?
Day is now a day of service, future Jan. 6's could become days of service for Washington, D.C. In theory, this could be something with bipartisan support.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Day is now a day of service, future Jan. 6's could become days of service for Washington, D.C. In theory, this could be something with bipartisan support.
Perhaps the president should remember that in July 1975, he introduced S. 2067, and gave these remarks, as printed in the Congressional Record: “In brief, this bill limits to 4 years the length of
The 20’s push to replace McCarthy has even failed to produce a candidate who could get more than 20 votes, much less actually win.
Other Republicans opted for what is now a familiar tactic for responding to 45’s most outrageous words and actions: Say everything. Qualify everything. Promise nothing. Rep.
Alito Jr.’s earth-shaking opinion was leaked in early May, many political analysts failed to grasp the degree to which abortion would become the dominant campaign issue.
Sometimes, though, it’s serious, as in the case of 1988’s “Mississippi Burning.” Director Alan Parker used the excuse of creative license when he made heroes out of agents in J.
Joe Manchin’s opposition to HR 1’s Senate counterpart, S 1, highlights the importance of alternative routes for reform. One of those paths is at the state level.
Also being considered is a $2 trillion energy tax, raising the estate tax and potentially taking aim at small businesses and S corporations.
OPINION — The vice president’s residence, soon to be home to Kamala Harris, stands on land once owned by D.C.’s second-largest slave owner.
Democrats are pushing bills, HR 1 and S 1, that are antithetical to free and fair elections, not to mention First Amendment rights.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1963 “Letter from Birmingham Jail” chided the predominantly white religious leaders who urged caution rather than nonviolent demonstrations, who were more devoted to “order” than
S. Capitol and used dozens of pens to sign one of the most important documents in U. S. history — the Voting Rights Act.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, quoting selective passages about content of character.