Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

1,596 results for "senate re"

Filters: 110th Congress Clear all

Franken Leads in New Minnesota Ballot Count

Coleman will be re-elected to the Senate.” Franken’s campaign announced Saturday that its internal tally showed a 35- to 50-vote lead over Coleman before adding the wrongfully rejected absentee ballots

Minnesota Senate Office Could Close Temporarily

Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), Al Franken and thousands of contested ballots in their Senate race isn’t resolved by Jan. 6, one Minnesota Senate office will cease to exist — at least temporarily.

Davis: Replacing Obama Could Take Months

Rod Blagojevich (D) and name a Senate replacement for President-elect Barack Obama. “I think we’re talking about certainly weeks, perhaps even months to go through the process,” Davis said on MSNBC.

Reid Readies for 2010

Facing an expected full-court press from Republicans in his 2010 re-election race, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is ramping up his campaign operation, sending out one of his first fundraising

Dingell to Lead House Health Care Overhaul

He will serve as the chief sponsor of the bill and top negotiator with the Senate and White House on the measure. “We’re very happy about this,” a Dingell source said.

Sununu Keeps a Government Paycheck

John Sununu (R-N.H.), fresh off an unsuccessful re-election bid, could be pulling a federal paycheck just a little while longer.

Poersch, McKenna to Stay at DSCC

Senatorial Campaign Committee Chairman, has scored his first recruiting victories of the 2010 election cycle — retaining two of the committee’s most senior aides who helped the Democrats win at least seven Senate

Best Auto Plan: Bankruptcy Terms Minus Bankruptcy

Bush “made a decision that he didn’t want to see a failure of an auto company, so we’re right now exploring the options.” Asked about most Congressional Republicans’ favored process — Chapter 11

Business Associations Say It’s Business as Usual

While acknowledging that new House and Senate Democratic majorities will mean trimmer legislative wish lists, GOP-leaning trade associations are hardly undergoing a major retooling of their lobbying or