Skip to content

Search Roll Call

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

17 results for "Hillary Step"

Filters: appropriations Clear all

Campaigns · 119th Congress

At the Races: Spring fever

Hillary Scholten won’t run for Senate, she told The Detroit News, and will instead seek a third term in the House. Scholten flipped her Grand Rapids-area seat in 2022.

Campaigns · 118th Congress

At the Races: Drip, drip, drip

Hillary Scholten’s call for President Joe Biden to “pass the torch” to a new candidate made her the third Democratic “Frontliner” to do so this week and continued the slow drip of elected Democrats calling

Campaigns · 118th Congress

At the Races: Trumping incumbency

Latimer’s endorsements are an establishment who’s who, from former first lady, secretary of State, New York senator and presidential nominee Hillary Clinton to former Reps. Nita M.

Campaigns · 118th Congress

At the Races: Dem divisions get violent

Hillary Scholten, D-Mich., said in a statement Thursday.

Congress · 116th Congress

Meet the key appropriations players of the fall

After initial decisions by Republican and Democratic clerks — the top staffers on the Appropriations subcommittees — full committee staff will step in to help work out any remaining issues.

Congress · 116th Congress

Key House votes in 2018: CQ Vote Studies

In 2018, Congress took the unprecedented step of eliminating a 2013 guidance document from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that sought to prevent discriminatory practices among auto lenders

Politics · 115th Congress

Marcy Kaptur Has a 2018 Message for House Democrats

President Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by more than 8 points in Ohio. Kaptur unseated a one-term Republican by 19 points in that first race in 1982 with no help from the national party.

Policy · 114th Congress

Standoff Over Zika Spending Arrives at Convention

I don’t know, but I know this, if Hillary Clinton is our president, nothing will change.”   Calling for voters to think about the Supreme Court, he implored them: “Let’s keep the Senate.”