Search Roll Call
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
646 results for "p/bill"
Opinion · 119th Congress
In Trump’s Department of Justice, weaponization without accountability
When then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch and former President Bill Clinton happened to meet on the tarmac in Phoenix, they said they exchanged pleasantries about life, family and Brexit.
Opinion · 119th Congress
Connecting the dots on the economy
</p> In the fourth quarter of 2025 alone, the job losses were at 116,000.
Congress · 119th Congress
Congress’ unconditional surrender
</p> It was a victory for the president and his policy.
Opinion · 118th Congress
When tuneful nostalgia turns toxic: The old days weren’t good for everyone
“Minnesota’s bill would permit 16- and 17-year-olds to work construction jobs. The Iowa measure would allow 14- and 15-year-olds to work certain jobs in meatpacking plants.”</p> What could go wrong?
Opinion · 118th Congress
The unchangeable Marjorie Taylor Greene
</p> In the Bill Clinton White House, there was a widespread belief that the philandering president had cleaned up his act.
Opinion · 118th Congress
Is Joe Biden out of touch, or is he just cynical?
</p> One of Biden’s biggest celebratory moments Tuesday night came as he bragged about passage of the infrastructure bill and the 20,000 projects already in the pipeline.
Opinion · 118th Congress
Nonprofit hospitals should act like nonprofits
federal poverty level, are still entitled to partial bill forgiveness.
Opinion · 117th Congress
The oversight House Republicans could do — but probably won’t
</p> Hamilton knows a thing or two about the word.
Opinion · 117th Congress
The beginning of the end for Donald Trump? Probably.
</p> ‘Dirty deal with the Dems’ Indeed, Rep.
Opinion · 117th Congress
Midterm jinxes and presidential rebounds
</p> Never mind.</p> Remember all that chatter the past few days about how terrible Democratic messaging has been, and about how abortion had faded dramatically as an issue?
Campaigns · 117th Congress
A noisy, but unproductive, Congress looms
</p> Still, there could be some legislating. Analysts say the parties have plenty of reasons to get together on a farm bill, which would please both sides’ rural and business constituencies.
Opinion · 117th Congress
Presidential approval, election mandates and the midterm dynamic
</p> The 1980 election was a blowout.
Opinion · 117th Congress
Impeach Biden or investigate Trump? Voters have a choice to make
will not break a legislative impasse that dates back to the Bill Clinton years.</p> Abortion is the rare issue where there actually is a congressional solution — passing legislation to codify Roe v.
Campaigns · 117th Congress
So little Senate floor time left, so many Biden judicial nominees in limbo
</p> He suggested the chamber will start next month with the fiscal 2023 defense authorization bill, saying doing so “will save us valuable [time] and enable us to get more done.”
Opinion · 117th Congress
The fight over faith in politics: Which faith? Whose values?
Fifty million people are going to experience some sort of voter suppression because we’ve not restored the Voting Rights Act and passed the original John Lewis bill that the guy who amended the original
Opinion · 117th Congress
‘Quite extraordinary’: Taking control in November would unleash a GOP leadership maelstrom
William Hoagland, a former aide to then-Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee and now with the Bipartisan Policy Center, offered some advice for Scott: “I would really try to mend my relationship, somehow
Opinion · 117th Congress
Fighting unwinnable battles in an American culture war
</p> Michelle Obama’s speech was not about how bad we were but how far we’ve come, and isn’t that something Americans can point to with pride?</p> Apparently not.
Opinion · 117th Congress
Why the conventional wisdom about 2022 has been so wrong
</p> On the House side, there have been only three exceptions in more than a century: 1934, at the depths of the Depression; 1998, as Republicans overreached in impeaching Bill Clinton; and 2002, when