Skip to content

Search Roll Call

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

1,587 results for "6"

Filters: leadership Clear all

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

Photos of the week ending Jan. 7, 2022

This week began with a snowstorm that helped usher in the new year, followed by a blizzard of reminders of last year’s Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

PAC giving continues to give some companies pause

The council, in its 2021 corporate PAC benchmarking report, found that company PACs were heavily affected by both the aftermath of Jan. 6 and from the COVID-19 pandemic, which shut down in-person

Congress · 117th Congress

‘The concern is looking forward’ regarding Jan. 6

Now, months into her work on the Jan. 6 select committee’s investigation into the deadly Capitol attack, Lofgren is concerned that, even for something as grave as a violent attempt to overturn the

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Defense contractors bankrolled campaigns of election objectors

campaigns of dozens of election objectors and to Republicans’ Senate and House campaign committees and leadership PACs, the report said, after some of those companies had halted such payments after the Jan. 6

Congress · 117th Congress

Child credit backers look to workarounds if budget bill stalls

The sweetened credit for the 2021 tax year provides up to $3,600 per child under age 6 or $3,000 per child ages 6 through 17, and makes the benefit fully refundable, which means it’s paid in full to families

Opinion · 117th Congress

Where have you gone, Richard Nixon?

When modern-day Visigoths sacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, I recalled a story that former Virginia Republican Sen. John Warner told me about Richard Nixon’s concession in 1960. 

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

21 photos that defined 2021 on Capitol Hill

Following the Jan. 6 attack, fencing with razor wire was erected around the Capitol complex. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) 3.

Congress · 117th Congress

House votes to hold Mark Meadows in contempt of Congress

The House voted 222-208 Tuesday to hold former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with the Jan. 6 select committee’s investigation.