Opinion · 115th Congress
Opinion: It’s Too Soon to Bet the Ranch on the Midterms
The CBS survey (May 3-6) showed 40 percent of each of the parties’ supporters as “very enthusiastic” about voting, with 23 percent of each somewhat enthusiastic.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
The CBS survey (May 3-6) showed 40 percent of each of the parties’ supporters as “very enthusiastic” about voting, with 23 percent of each somewhat enthusiastic.
Domenici, who castigated the strategy of punting on appropriations bills in a blistering Dec. 6, 2006, floor speech.
Trump’s 75-minute “I alone can fix it” stem-winder drew 32.2 million viewers, by Nielson’s count, just 7 percent more than Hillary Clinton’s speech the following week and 6 percent more than Mitt Romney
The poll surveyed 400 likely primary voters from May 6-8 via landline and cell phones. The margin of error was 4.9 percent.
He’s spent nearly $6 million of his own money on the race, and likely much more by the time Tuesday comes and goes.
He also noted that Democrats voted to cut more than $6 billion in unspent CHIP funds in the fiscal 2018 omnibus spending bill enacted in March, although the money was used to offset other programs in
Patrick Meehan, who resigned last week, will take place in conjunction with the general election on Nov. 6.
The group describes itself as “6 million Americans who are passionate about promoting free markets and individual liberty.”
Eight percent backed former Libertarian presidential candidate Austin Petersen, while 6 percent backed Courtland Sykes, who garnered national media attention for a lengthy statement calling feminists “
Blake Farentholdresigned April 6, four months after news broke that he had settled a sexual harassment lawsuit with taxpayer money.
The committee rejected that amendment on a 6-15 vote. Coons, Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois and other Democrats said they were convinced that the bill would be constitutional.
A Republican woman won Arizona’s 8th District special election Tuesday night, although Debbie Lesko’s 6-point margin of victory for a solidly GOP seat raised party concerns about the tough election
Debbie Lesko won the special election in Arizona’s deep red 8th District Tuesday night — but only by 6 points in a district President Donald Trump carried by 21 points in 2016.
Expansion advocates must file signatures by April 30 in Idaho, June 22 in Montana and July 6 in Nebraska to get on the November ballot.
Besides checking in regularly on Roll Call’s 2018 Election Guide by Nathan Gonzales to see who “leaning” and who’s “likely,” look for the moments up to and including Nov. 6. But don’t blink.
He donated the same amount to Gianforte last year, ahead of the Montana Republican’s 6-point special election victory over Democrat Rob Quist.
He did the same last year, ahead of Gianforte’s 6-point special election victory over Democrat Rob Quist. The night before the special election, Gianforte attacked Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs.
Toward the end of the breakfast, Corker was asked about what he plans to do with his own campaign war chest, which still has about $6 million in the bank, and he said he had not given it any thought
And yet in our fast-forward era, many residents of TV green rooms forget that Nov. 6 is still more than six months away.