Skip to content

Search Roll Call

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

313 results for "trump rules on Congress"

Filters: 117th Congress Clear all

Congress · 117th Congress

Congress faces delays in speedy push for Jan. 6 accountability

One year out from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, the members of Congress who have pushed for accountability for more than just the rioters still have to contend with a federal justice system

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: A year later …

Tim Kaine of Virginia, injected a bit of reality, saying that the party’s negotiations on voting rights and rules changes are going about as “slow as my commute,” referring to his epic all-nighter trapped

Congress · 117th Congress

Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid dies at 82

He retired from Senate service in January 2017, at the end of the 114th Congress, after serving as the chamber’s Democratic leader for over a decade.

Congress · 117th Congress

Jan. 6 panel wants to interview Jim Jordan

The panel wants to discuss each time Jordan and Trump spoke on Jan. 6 “in detail” and any contacts he had on Jan. 5 or 6 with people in the hotel where organizers gathered, the so-called Willard

Campaigns · 117th Congress

At the Races: Debt the halls

Show them the taxes: Seeking to avoid a repeat of the scandal-plagued Trump presidency, House Democrats approved a bill recently, almost entirely along party lines, that would put new limits on executive

Congress · 117th Congress

House votes to hold Mark Meadows in contempt of Congress

On Jan. 6, Meadows received several urgent text messages from members, Fox News hosts, Donald Trump Jr., administration officials and others imploring him to get Trump to stop the violent rioters as they

Congress · 117th Congress

Jan. 6 rally organizers issued subpoenas

President Donald Trump to plan the rally on the Ellipse immediately before his supporters stormed the Capitol.

Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress

‘You’re’ says about Congress right now

When Marjorie Taylor Greene trashed a fellow Republican on Twitter this week, the exchange raised serious questions about abortion, Islamophobia and eroding civility in Congress.