Congress · 117th Congress
Supreme Court allows Jan. 6 subpoena for Arizona GOP leader
The Supreme Court cleared the way Monday for the House Jan. 6 panel to get phone records from the chair of the Arizona Republican Party.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
The Supreme Court cleared the way Monday for the House Jan. 6 panel to get phone records from the chair of the Arizona Republican Party.
The 2022 midterm elections were indeed a choice, not a referendum, an aberration that benefited Democrats in House and Senate races.
Democrats will control the Senate in the 118th Congress. Only one seat has flipped so far, the result of Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman's win.
Speaker Pelosi wants "healing" across a divided country, but Donald Trump's political movement feeds off the opposite.
Guidelines released Thursday instruct the government to ensure unaccompanied migrant children in its care have access to abortion.
The CQ Roll Call newsroom tracks campaigns nationwide, sharing the best stories, with some extras, in the At the Races newsletter.
Advocates and opponents of corporate disclosure of climate data made their cases as the SEC now turns to finalizing a rule.
Stacey Abrams spent an inordinate amount of time swatting down the idea that Black men didn’t like her. But Blacks aren’t the problem here.
The Supreme Court should not keep former President Donald Trump’s tax returns from Rep. Richard E. Neal, House attorneys said in a filing.
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.
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.
A federal appeals court sounded ready Wednesday to back the power of the House to require lawmakers to wear a mask on the floor or be fined.
A "red wave" did not hit the House, but Republicans picked up seats even as they lost some and were confident they'd have control next year.
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.