Skip to content

Search Roll Call

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

230 results for "should without"

Filters: Campaigns Clear all

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: Still Roe-verberating

“Read below to understand why I voted to defend reproductive freedom, then sign your name if you agree that such a personal health care decision should be between a woman and her doctor,” Colorado

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Biden elevates Rick Scott as economic policy adversary

In the plan, Scott had said all Americans should pay some taxes to have “skin in the game,” leading Democrats to point out that would include many low-income retirees who are not paying income tax.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: KBJ OK TBD

Republicans bringing up hot-topic issues had to balance exciting their base without alienating swing voters, John T. Bennett wrote this week.

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: Retreat rerouted

They were ultimately successful in getting the $15.6 billion COVID-19 relief stripped from the spending package and inserted into a new bill without the offensive state cuts that will be considered next

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: Taxes, vets split GOP?

But without the support of party leaders in Washington, some people are skeptical the PAC could close Lamb’s fundraising gap, The Philadelphia Inquirer reports. 

Campaigns · 117th Congress

Supreme Court signals few map changes before midterms

He wrote the lower court order would violate a judicial principle that courts should not alter election laws in the period right before an election, depending on how big the change is and how close it

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: SCOTUS focus

Curtis on the Equal Time podcast that Black voters have a right to be frustrated, “but what we should not do is allow people to discourage us from exercising our right to vote.”

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: Sinematic

They raised a whole bunch of money, which they said equated support. … Now everybody’s running without being an elected official, except for me.