Campaigns · 117th Congress
At the Races: Don’t Manchin it
Still, that didn’t stop advocates from descending on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, pushing for the measure, dubbed the For the People Act, which cleared the House this spring.
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Still, that didn’t stop advocates from descending on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, pushing for the measure, dubbed the For the People Act, which cleared the House this spring.
Vicky Hartzler launched a Senate run in Missouri on Thursday, becoming the first member of the state’s congressional delegation to jump into the race. She may not be the last.
Lindsey Graham, a Trump ally who has discussed Senate races with the former president, said in a brief interview Wednesday.
The dearth of Black women did not necessarily drive Beasley’s decision to run for Senate, but she said in a phone interview she was cognizant her candidacy could affect other women.
“I wanted to be prepared for the worst and hope for the best,” he recalled in a recent phone interview. “Preparing for the worst was the right thing to do.”
The 2022 race will likely be among the more expensive. ones, and already Budd has the backing of a major GOP group.
Carter Peterson, who is not related, cast herself as the progressive in the race.
The GOP needs a net gain of just one seat to win control of the Senate next year.
Of the 139 House members who voted against certifying electoral votes, the analysis looked at the 103 who were serving in 2019 and could provide a comparison to the same point in the last election
Cindy Axne said again in a recent interview with The Storm Lake Times that she’s weighing a run for Senate or for governor in 2022.
“I think we need reform more fundamentally,” Khanna said in an interview this week. “It’s not enough to say, ‘OK, I don’t take PAC money or lobbyist money.”
“I was the only woman of color there,” Lin recalled in a recent interview. “It was 80 percent white guys.”
The NRCC spent the week blasting reporters with emails alleging that the Democrats’ plans would hurt — not help — the middle class.
But the bills face slim odds of passing the Senate.
“I feel the pain and the sorrow and the loss and the grief all over again,” he said in an interview. “There’s this personal sense of, I should be doing more, I should accomplish more.”
Manchin is the lone Democrat in the 50-50 chamber who has not yet embraced the legislation, dubbed S1 and HR1, even though he signed on as a co-sponsor when the Senate was in GOP control in the last
“We’re starting in first,” Brooks said in a Tuesday interview.
committee members who will select the nominee after the state set a June 1 date for the special election.
Do you recognize the pain that their families are going through?” Warnock told CQ Roll Call in a brief interview at the Capitol this week.
Republican strategists who talked to At the Races this week said they didn’t see the need to address the provision directly considering all the “waste” they have identified elsewhere in the COVID