McConnell Plans to Keep Committee Seats in New Congress
In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, incoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he intended to keep his seat on the Appropriations Committee in the 114th Congress.
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In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, incoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he intended to keep his seat on the Appropriations Committee in the 114th Congress.
In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi was optimistic about the 2016 presidential election, saying by then the country could see its first female president
In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, incoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said while Republicans would work to roll back President Barack Obama’s health care law, opponents
In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi insisted she doesn’t gloat when House Republicans can’t shore up the votes among their own members to pass any
In an exclusive interview with CQ Roll Call on Dec. 5, incoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had high praise for the incoming class of majority-makers.
Sánchez told CQ Roll Call during an interview taped for C-SPAN’s “Newsmakers” that she has “been thinking a lot” about addressing agitation among younger members of the rank and file as she approaches
“The language is okay,” Labrador explained in a separate interview, “but as a standalone bill, it was a meaningless action.”
Toomey, Sestak continued to traverse the state to raise cash before officially filing for a rematch against the senator in September.
on the marijuana issue, as well as a handful of others, so the provision was sent to the “big four.”
“We’re certainly looking very closely at it,” the Democrat told CQ Roll Call in a Wednesday phone interview.
Even in the face of the threats, the group wasn’t given a position at the booth because Carson was still registered to vote as an independent.
Well, we’ve made it through another strange political year — and let’s face it, they are all strange — so it’s time for me to devote another column to picking the best, the worst and the weirdest candidates
best, the worst and the weirdest candidates, campaigns and outcomes of the year.
It’s a great job … [with] great people,” the self-effacing Prater said in an interview. “It’s a big privilege.”
, president of the Trust for the National Mall, said Tuesday in a phone interview.
GOP senators were pleased to hear the news that the Ohio Republican with the gold-plated résumé plans to spend more of the next year in the Capitol than in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Siemens CEO Joe Kaeser said the deal will allow the company to combine Dresser-Rand’s oil and gas expertise with Siemens’ electrical technology.
But it all started with the tiger cages. In an interview, Harkin recounted how he came to Washington in 1969 to work for Iowa Democratic Congressman Neal Smith.
But it all started with the tiger cages. In an interview, Harkin recounted how he came to Washington in 1969 to work for Iowa Democratic Congressman Neal Smith.
“We wanted to send a strong message that bipartisanship for millennials is not reserved for the centrists or for the moderates … [It] also includes those on the far left and the far right,” Steven