Campaigns · 118th Congress
At the Races: Making an Empire statement
The DCCC criticized D’Esposito for skipping a vote Wednesday on a government spending bill, which was defeated 202-220, to attend the rally.
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The DCCC criticized D’Esposito for skipping a vote Wednesday on a government spending bill, which was defeated 202-220, to attend the rally.
priorities, as his party is trying to advance a measure that passed the House earlier this year requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections as part of a government funding bill
</p> Starting gate Warren vs. crypto: Massachusetts Democratic Sen.
</p> RIP: New Jersey Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., who showed zeal in battling with his colleagues but could be seen slapping their backs moments later, died Wednesday at age 87.
</p> And for Bush: Missouri Rep.
</p> Democrats are also eyeing new districts that could be in play.
</p> Border vote: Democratic Reps.
</p> Menendez verdict: A federal jury found Sen.
</p> Bill stalls: A measure pushed by the GOP in Ohio that would have required “intellectual diversity” on politically divisive topics such as abortion and the outcome of elections as well as barring
</p> Taking names: Neither side expected Wednesday’s procedural Senate vote to start debate on a bill establishing a federal right to obtain contraceptives to succeed, and it didn’t, as Sandhya Raman
</p> Border bill ramifications: Democrats believe border security will remain a potent political issue for the party in Senate battlegrounds and are pointing to new polling to prove it.
In its first ad opposing Bowman, the group says Bowman “refuses to compromise, even with President Biden,” and highlights Bowman’s votes against a bipartisan infrastructure bill and against a measure to
</p> Posey bows out: Rep. Bill Posey, R-Fla., has opted not to seek reelection despite having gotten former President Donald Trump’s endorsement for another term back in March.
</p> Flag flap: After the House passed a bill Saturday to send more military aid to Ukraine, Democrats on the floor were waving the war-torn country’s blue and yellow flag, and Republicans were not amused
</p> “Republican Senate candidates lost their message on the border the minute they opposed the border security bill that members of their own party helped write,” said Tommy Garcia, a spokesman for the
But he was also a foreign policy hawk with a moralistic streak, delivering one of the most scathing takedowns of President Bill Clinton during Clinton’s 1999 impeachment trial.