Skip to content

Search Roll Call

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

845 results for "should without"

Filters: 117th Congress Clear all

Policy · 117th Congress

Effort to stop fraud tracks the one to boost vaccination rate

“The main message we’re trying to get out to folks who may be influenced otherwise is, if you don’t go to a legitimate trusted health care provider and receive a shot in your arm, you should not

Congress · 117th Congress

Congress weighs whistleblower safeguards after Trump saga

Meanwhile, Trump and his allies in Congress sought to discover and disclose the whistleblower’s identity, particularly after a conservative outlet reported a name and work history without direct

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: All-nighter August

Two Republicans, two candidates without a party affiliation, one Libertarian and a write-in hopeful also qualified to run. The general election is scheduled for Jan. 11.

Congress · 117th Congress

Judge sides with House Democrats on some Trump financial records

A federal district judge ruled Wednesday that House Democrats should obtain some — but not all — of former President Donald Trump’s tax records they seek from accounting firm Mazars USA, the latest in

Congress · 117th Congress

Democrats about to walk budget tightrope in House

Ed Case has expressed similar concerns and said in a recent interview he wouldn’t support the budget without a vote scheduled on the infrastructure bill. 

Congress · 117th Congress

Setting the stage for the next debt limit showdown

They can do it without any Republican votes,” Florida GOP Sen. Rick Scott told reporters Monday. “I oppose raising the debt ceiling without structural change.”

Congress · 117th Congress

Cryptocurrency tax reporting deal scotched in Senate

He said the impasse, if the bill was enacted without changes, could send the industry and jobs overseas. “Cryptocurrency isn’t tied to any particular piece of dirt,” Cruz said on the floor. 

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

The Senate is about to pull some all-nighters. Why?

The rules of reconciliation are needlessly complex — something else the Senate, should it ever muster the collective will, could fix — but a prominent feature is the vote-a-ramas that take place.