Campaigns · 119th Congress
Democrats continue to outraise Republicans in key Senate races
Scott P. Brown, brought in $374,000 during the quarter and ended December with more than $900,000 in the bank. ↵↵Rep.
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Scott P. Brown, brought in $374,000 during the quarter and ended December with more than $900,000 in the bank. ↵↵Rep.
Scott P. Brown (R)↵↵Brown won a 2010 special election in deep-blue Massachusetts to succeed the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy but lost reelection two years later to Democrat Elizabeth Warren.
</p> Thirty days in, that’s changing.
</p> </p> It’s been hard to turn on the TV news or open a news website this week without catching California Rep. Kevin Kiley.
Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who faces multiple primary challengers, raised nearly $1.4 million for his Senate account during the third quarter, ending September with $9.5 million on hand. State Sen.
</p> </p> In March, 10 members of the Senate Democratic Caucus backed a procedural motion to advance a stopgap funding bill and avert a government shutdown. Minority Leader Charles E.
Then, it was Republicans angry over Barack Obama’s health care overhaul; today, it’s Democrats outraged by Donald Trump’s recently enacted domestic policy bill.
Bill Cassidy faces a number of challenges should he go forward with his reelection bid next year, given his impeachment trial vote against President Donald Trump and the state’s new primary system, as
</p> </p> The White House kicked off the effort to sell its mammoth tax and spending bill into high gear this week, with both President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance making separate trips
</p> Starting gate Reconciliation and resistance: Last week’s House vote on a sweeping reconciliation bill encompassing much of the Trump agenda is already becoming a focal point of the campaign for control
</p> Getting closer: The GOP budget reconciliation bill proposes allocating $5 billion a year to provide a tax break for private and religious school vouchers, bringing conservatives closer to their long-standing
</p> “If you want to eliminate the Department of Education, then put your name on a bill to do that,” the Connecticut Democrat told her GOP colleagues. “Let your constituents see it.
</p> What we’re reading All politics is local: The 51st ponders what might happen if Congress passes a bill proposed by two Republicans to eliminate D.C.’s home rule.
Bill Haggerty, R-Tenn. Haggerty has landed on several committees that could make him a candidate for secretary of State, Treasury or Commerce.
</p> Committee of two: Reps.
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.