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The Tennessee Titans

In an interview Wednesday, Hilleary said his interest in a bid was piqued by a 10-year reunion of his 1994 Congressional class.

Frist Set to Hit the Hustings

The trip, in which he will criss-cross the Midwest, will be followed a week later by Frist’s first visit since the conclusion of the 2004 elections to the critical state of New Hampshire, where he

Santorum Book to Counter Clinton’s

“It is a contrast to how the left looks at structure and order in society and how I look at structure and order in society,” Santorum said in an interview yesterday.

House Continuity Bill Slated to Hit Floor Soon

In the 108th Congress, the House passed the bill by a large margin, but the measure was quietly opposed in some corners of the other chamber on technical and strategic grounds.

Energized Jeffords Confident About 2006

“I feel good and healthy,” the 70-year-old Senator said during a recent interview in his Capitol Hill office. “I just got two new eyes; I feel better than I have in years.”

Schumer Targets Potential Retirees

“Last time we were hurt by five retirements,” said Schumer in an interview Tuesday. “We’re trying to minimize them as much as possible this time.” Those decisions leave only Sens.

Georgia Remap Stings GOPers

The map proposed yesterday by the state Senate mirrors the version of the map endorsed by the seven Georgia Republicans known as the “G-7.”

Amendment Fans Bulk Up

“I told people all along that this wouldn’t have a shot unless people were actively involved to push it from the outside,” Rohrabacher said in interview.

Author’s ‘Extreme’ Thriller

Lucas Cash is the mysterious director of the FBI, while John Wright is the president of the United States, masquerading as an atheist to stir up religious backlash around the country.

Frank Regrets Jordan Firing

In an interview with HOH, Frank said he regrets Jordan’s firing. Frank noted that Jordan, at Frank’s urging, clarified his controversial remarks in Davos, Switzerland, soon after making them.

Obama, Thune in Demand

But Obama isn’t any run-of-the-mill lawmaker. He is the first black American to serve in the chamber since 1998 — the year Sen. Carol Moseley Braun (D-Ill.) was defeated after just one term.

CBC’s Watt Reaches Out

After just five weeks on the job, the new chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus is intent on breaking down walls and proving that minority issues aren’t the concern of just one party.

Centrist Democrats Search for Direction

At the same time, off the Hill, a feud between leading figures in the centrist Democratic universe — Al From of the Democratic Leadership Council and Simon Rosenberg of the New Democrat Network —

Blackwell No-Show Riles Ney

It started out as such a simple proposition: The chairman of the House Administration Committee would hold hearings on the implementation of the Help America Vote Act and invite the official in charge

Challenge to Gordon Dismissed

“This is the same contest, the same constituent, the same candidate, making the same erroneous complaints that were dismissed by this committee two years ago,” Millender-McDonald said, referring

Georgia Legislature Ponders Remap

The seven Peach State Republicans, commonly referred to as the “G-7,” met Tuesday night to discuss strategy and the current state of the redistricting plan.