After the Supplemental, 12 Regular Appropriations Bills Await
“I don’t expect it to get any better. If anything, I expect it’ll get worse.” And Senate Minority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said he is already “getting organized to take them on.”
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“I don’t expect it to get any better. If anything, I expect it’ll get worse.” And Senate Minority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said he is already “getting organized to take them on.”
“I haven’t said no at this point. I haven’t ruled it out, and I haven’t ruled it in.” Without Rossi, the Republican bench looks pretty weak.
I haven’t heard him complain about SCHIP or LIHEAP or any of the other big pieces,” the aide said, referring to children’s health insurance and home energy subsidies.
But the state Senator, said to be a possible frontrunner for the overwhelmingly Democratic seat, said she would make an announcement on Wednesday.
I think the Members would like to keep those employees.”
“I hope we don’t have one,” said moderate Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.). “If we have to, we have to, but I really hope we don’t.”
Either we can keep the benchmarks [for the Iraqi government] part of the bill without saying that the troops must begin to come back within four months.
Bruce Braley (D-Iowa), another freshman, acknowledged it is hard for him to move around his district without crossing paths with one or more of the contenders.
“Before getting the OOC involved I wanted to make sure all avenues had been exhausted,” Riley said.
“As a result of the group’s amplifiers, residents as far away as three blocks away can’t open their windows or work in their yards without being subject to the amplified noise,” Wells said in a press
director, Elias Zerhouni, told the Senate in March that “the presentations about adult stem cells having as much or more potential than embryonic stem cells, in my view, do not hold scientific water … I
In a statement Tuesday evening, Pastor said: “I did meet with Congressman Renzi and he spoke to me about the importance of the bill. … He said it’s a bill that should not go away.
“It’s a delicate ballet,” he said. “It’s committee time, it’s staff time, it’s floor time. It’s a matter of how much further you can go without holding other things up.”
It’s a move that one tour guide said this week feels like “a hostile takeover.” “I feel like I’m going to be fired from one job and hired for another without any choice,” the tour guide said.
“Once you start ratcheting up blatant political moves, that leads to others,” said Senate Minority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.). “We won’t let that stand without an appropriate counter.”
“As much as they are an issue in my parks, I still enjoy hearing the geese honking.”
Jay Footlik, a former official in the Clinton administration who has roots in the district, described himself last week as “about as close as you can get” to being in the race without formally declaring
“I think what we’re seeing is a continuing fallout from the culture of corruption of the last Congress,” Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Chris Van Hollen (Md.) said Friday, recycling
“I don’t think that’s the best approach,” Senate Armed Services Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich) said Friday. “I think it’s too close to the end of the fiscal year for that.”
Then-Chairman Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.) fired 60 contractors in October without prior notice, leaving about 15 permanent staffers on the investigations team.