Campaigns · 117th Congress
They gave up House seats to run for other office. Most lost
Many of the 16 House members who gave up their seats to run for another office didn't make it over the finish line.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Many of the 16 House members who gave up their seats to run for another office didn't make it over the finish line.
Texas will have three members who have twin siblings, while Congress will again have a father-son duo in the Senate and House.
Election officials in Arizona and Mississippi said glitches in their systems didn't prevent people from voting despite allegations otherwise.
Republicans targeted several Democratic House members first elected in 2018 with national security backgrounds, but most survived tough races.
Voters decided on 17 health-related ballot initiatives, including measures on marijuana, dialysis and medical debt.
In the end, Mike Doyle couldn’t replace Mike Doyle in the hearts of Pittsburgh voters, as progressive Summer Lee held the seat for Democrats.
After winning his own reelection in New York, Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer talked as though he would keep that job next year.
Midterm takeaways: Unusual elections end on unexpected turf - Uncategorized
Biden said he would work with GOP leaders, though some issues were not subject to compromise, including abortion rights.
Remember all the conventional wisdom about how first term presidents lose big in their first midterms? Never mind.
A surfboard hangs above a Woodbridge, Va. bar Tuesday night at an election party for Yesli Vega, who lost the Virginia 7th District race.
Incumbent Democrats were defending 36 of the more than 50 competitive seats in the House in this year's midterm elections.
Capitol Lens | Shooting the moon - Heard on the Hill
Fighting at a Ukrainian nuclear power plant is raising some alarms about exporting atomic technologies — but not on Capitol Hill.
Federal and state officials reduced the risk that voting systems can be breached, but that doesn't stop the spread of such talk.
Control of the Senate for the next two years comes down to about a dozen races. Some were close, others were not.
A Democrat in Vermont and Republicans in Alabama and Oklahoma all easily won races to replace retiring senators.
It is likely Republicans will win control of the House, but the Senate could go either way, analyst Nathan L. Gonzales says.
Reapportionment and incumbents’ decisions to retire resulted in no incumbents being on the ballot in roughly 15 percent of House races.Â
Dozens of courtroom fights over Tuesday’s elections have a chance to delay the results of the midterm elections, legal experts said.