Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

22 results for "47-("

Filters: 117th Congress ohio Clear all

Congress · 117th Congress

Senate immigration showdown ends with Title 42 stalemate

Lee’s amendment then was rejected on a 47-50 vote. Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said Thursday that the Sinema-Tester amendment extending Title 42 was “set up not to pass.”

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

2022 News Photos of the Year

(Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) APRIL 7: Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer celebrates outside the Senate chamber after the Senate voted 53-47 to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

How vulnerable House incumbents fared in the 2022 midterms

Valadao was leading by 3 percentage points when The Associated Press called the race on Nov. 21 at 9:47 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

Congress · 117th Congress

House passes assault weapons ban in wake of mass shootings

The bill, HR 1808, would ban the sale, possession and transfer of high capacity magazines and assault-style weapons by both name, such as the AK-47, and features, such as a pistol grip.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Don’t rule out a GOP Senate wave

But in the Senate, Democrats won eight seats, taking them from 47 seats to 55 seats and the majority.

Policy · 117th Congress

Senate confirms border chief amid record migrant encounters

The 50-47 vote for the Tucson, Ariz., police chief makes him the first Senate-confirmed commissioner of CBP since 2019. Magnus was nominated for the role by President Joe Biden in April.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

New lines, new numbers, new ratings in Iowa

The new 2nd has a narrow Republican bent, considering Trump would have carried it 51 percent to 47 percent in 2020 while Hubbell would have won it by a narrower 48.8 percent to 48.6 percent in 2018

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Why comparing the 2022 midterm dynamics to 1966 is risky

ANALYSIS — Democrats lost 47 House seats in the 1966 midterm elections, and that result still “haunts” them, wrote Washington Post columnist Charles Lane recently. But should it?

White House · 117th Congress

Infrastructure deal reached, now comes the hard part

It includes $21 billion for environmental remediation; $73 billion for power infrastructure, including grid authority, $5 billion for western water storage and $47 billion to rebuild infrastructure in