Campaigns · 116th Congress
Election energy revs up on abortion policy
Activists on both sides of the abortion issue are ramping up on-the-ground efforts to rally behind candidates ahead of the Nov. 3 elections.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
Activists on both sides of the abortion issue are ramping up on-the-ground efforts to rally behind candidates ahead of the Nov. 3 elections.
Capitol Police court filings describe sexual misconduct and officers who left their guns unsecured and made derogatory statements about minorities.
Elon Musk has boasted the upstart SpaceX would drive down costs, but the firm is poised to charge much more for the first of its spy satellite launches.
Joe Biden is putting an infrastructure proposal that calls significant green investments front-and-center in his campaign.
President Donald Trump says he wants his pick for a ninth justice on the Supreme Court so he could prevail in any cases disputing the upcoming election.
A single depature in House Democrats' 14-member elected leadership team has created a competitive assistant speaker race and opened lower-ranking positions.
Discussions were underway Tuesday afternoon to resurrect a bipartisan stopgap funding deal including farm and nutrition aid that had been in dispute.
President Donald Trump will announce his Supreme Court nominee on Saturday, and there is not much to impede her eventual confirmation.
Nearly a year into the job and after defying a House subpoena, Homeland Security acting Secretary Chad Wolf faces a contentious Senate confirmation hearing.
The high court has several options at its disposal — including re-hearing big cases, such as one on Obamacare — as it starts its term with a vacancy.
The House swiftly passed a stopgap funding measure after a bipartisan farm aid deal. The bill is needed to avert a partial government shutdown Oct. 1.
Eric Ueland, a former Trump White House official and longtime GOP Hill aide, is competent, Democrats say, but has little foreign policy experience.
Lawmakers’ ability to set aside funding for home-state projects in spending bills could return next year under proposals from Appropriations contenders.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg will lie in repose at the Supreme Court and lie in state at the Capitol this week following her death Friday, providing the public an opportunity to pay respects to the trailblazing justice.
Democrats, as the party that believes government can have a positive effect on people’s lives, are conflicted about how and when to work with Donald Trump.
Avoiding a government shutdown is still the main agenda item for Congress, despite tension over when the Senate should take up a Supreme Court nominee.
Measure would allow federal spending on highways and transit to continue past Sept. 30, but the bill could meet resistance in the Senate.
The House will vote Tuesday on a short-term funding bill written by majority Democrats that Republicans and the White House oppose.
The battle to fill the Supreme Court vacancy opened with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death Friday will be a stress test for the court and its reputation.
Senate Democrats indicated they were focused on messaging in the Supreme Court nomination fight, not stalling the chamber’s business.