Campaigns · 117th Congress
Roll Call on the Road: Oz in Pennsylvania, Roscoe Beer in New York
Roll Call on the Road gives you a look at political candidates like Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania and a special election in New York.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Roll Call on the Road gives you a look at political candidates like Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania and a special election in New York.
Joe Q has cut hair on the House side of the Capitol for more than half a century, but next Friday will be his last day behind the chair.
He’s not naive enough to think he’s changing minds, but he still thinks it matters. “I’m coming at it as a person of patriotism,” the Democrat says.
President Joe Biden arrives on the South Lawn of the White House Tuesday for the signing of the chips and science bill.
Sen. Patrick Leahy arrives at the Capitol on Sunday in his Batman-adorned wheelchair for a vote during the reconciliation bill vote-a-rama.
Photos of the week: Highlights include Jon Stewart's push for the PACT Act and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema's decision on the reconciliation bill.
Last year, the contest got away from Congress’ rookie-heavy softball squad, but this time will be different, players say.
This is one platform “we haven’t seen weaponized yet,” analysts say, though John Fetterman and others are trying.
Comedian Jon Stewart hugs veteran Tim Hauser at a rally outside the Capitol Tuesday calling for Senate passage of veterans benefits legislation.
Photos of the week include statue and portrait unveilings, a baseball game, and a rush to finish work before the August recess.
Rep. Kevin Brady unveiled his portrait before suiting up for the Congressional Baseball Game. It was an epic Thursday.
Rep. Dean Phillips played softball, used the autopen and sweated through his suit when he worked for Sen. Patrick Leahy in the late 1980s.
Climate activists had promised to disrupt Thursday’s Congressional Baseball Game, but in the end it was pouring rain that delayed the action.
Adam Kinzinger’s interns took on a sobering summer project — compiling a video of threats against their boss.
Advocates are calling on the Senate to create a diversity office similar to one in the House, saying it would fill a crucial need.
Bosses used to tell Hill aides, “If I ever see your name in the newspapers, it better be in the obituaries … or it will be.”
Lawmakers and dignitaries unveil the statue of Amelia Earhart in Statuary Hall in the Capitol on Wednesday, July 27, 2022.
Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer leaves the Radio/TV Gallery studio in the Capitol on Tuesday after a news conference.
“We refuse to watch politicians literally play games while the world burns,” said an organizer with climate group Now or Never.
There are a few tweets that Sen. Brian Schatz wishes he could take back, but that’s the way it goes on social media.