Bluntly Speaking
Re-designing Hoyer.
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Re-designing Hoyer.
While Bush’s re-election is the top priority of the state party, “the two really go hand in hand,” he said, “and we plan to send Senator Feingold packing.”
John McCain (R) looks like a safe bet for re-election in 2004, although he could draw a primary challenge from Rep. Jeff Flake.
Among the well-to-do Democrats said to be considering bids in 2004 are: Erskine Bowles (N.C.), who lost an open-seat Senate race in 2002, St.
. … We’ve talked to the Senate side and they are interested in it, and we believe that it should have been done and it’s an incorrect thing for us not to do it — because now the 18.2 cents per gallon is
Edwards remains undecided on whether he will run for re-election in 2004.
While it’s too soon to say how many of these campaigns have donors who maxed out, a Roll Call analysis of 2004 Senate races in four large states — New York, California, Pennsylvania and Illinois — showed
Not only did they work together successfully on a number of pieces of legislation, but Bullock also endorsed Bush for re-election and then later for president.
Senate centrists are warning President Bush that he’s jeopardizing his future legislative agenda as the White House uses strong-arm tactics to go for broke in its efforts to win passage of a $500 billion-plus
The partisanship on the Senate Judiciary Committee has gotten so bad that Chairman Orrin Hatch (R), the straight-laced Mormon from Utah, essentially called Sen.
He lost his bid for re-election in 1976, but he recaptured the governor’s mansion four years later. The Republican was first elected to the Senate in 1986 and is now in his third term.
step into the breach and restore the luster of the oft-ignored Senate panel.
Clearly, citizens of South Dakota who don’t like Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D) are entirely within their rights to mount a $1 million media campaign to “destroy” his credibility and “end his public
Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Jim Gibbons (R-Nev.) to make Senate bids against Democratic incumbents.
Senate Republicans sought to bring a swift end Tuesday to lingering questions surrounding their leadership team, hoping to pivot away from two controversies toward a successful run of domestic policy initiatives
John Edwards (D), who is running for president and has not yet decided whether he will seek re-election in 2004.
Senate in 1966. In 1978 he did not seek re-election. Republican Dick Cheney, now vice president, succeeded him.
A conservative group based in South Dakota is rounding up financial backers in Washington to fund a nearly $1 million, year-long media campaign designed to “destroy” Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle’
Unlike recent party leaders in the Senate, Frist came to the leader’s post in a most unorthodox manner. Frist’s eight years in Senate service is roughly equivalent to the tenures of then-Sen.
(Tenn.), a prospective 2006 Senate candidate, and Chet Edwards (Texas) and Earl Pomeroy (N.D.), both of whom could face tough re-election tests in their rural districts again in 2004.