U.S. Congress News

Ailing Kennedy aims to return to Senate in January

AP - 29 minutes ago

WASHINTON - Sen. Edward Kennedy will not be on Capitol Hill this week when Congress returns from its summer break. But the Massachusetts senator, who has brain cancer, does plan to return in January.

  • In this March 28, 2006 file photo, the Discoverer Deep Seas drillship sits on station off the coast of Louisiana as Chevron drills for oil in the Gulf of Mexico.  As the House and Senate reconvene Monday after back-to-back political conventions, both parties eager to use the three-week session to show voters why their candidates are the ones to fix the economy and lower energy prices.  Republicans have made the Democrats' reluctance to open up more offshore areas to oil drilling the major theme in their effort to minimize the anticipated loss of GOP House and Senate seats in November.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
    Returning lawmakers make Capitol a campaign stage AP - 2 hours, 23 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON - The House and Senate reconvene Monday after back-to-back political conventions, both parties eager to use the three-week session to show voters why their candidates are the ones to fix the economy and lower energy prices.

  • In this March 19, 2008 file photo, a Toyota Prius promotes hybrid technology at the New York International Auto Show. Auto industry allies hope to secure up to $50 billion in government loans this month that would pay to modernize plants and help struggling car makers build more fuel-efficient vehicles.    (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
    Auto industry to press Congress for $50B in loans AP - 2 hours, 27 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON - Auto industry allies hope to secure up to $50 billion in government loans this month that would pay to modernize plants and help struggling car makers build more fuel-efficient vehicles.

  • US Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Delaware Sen. Joe Biden (R) speaks alongside US Democratic Presidential Candidate Illinois Senator Barack Obama during a discussion at the Toledo Lucas County Public Library in Toledo, Ohio, in August 2008. Obama and John McCain feuded and laid claim to being the authentic candidate of change and reform on Sunday.(AFP/File/Saul Loeb)
    Obama, McCain duel as race heads into home stretch AFP - 1 hour, 19 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON (AFP) - Barack Obama and John McCain feuded and laid claim to being the authentic candidate of change and reform on Sunday as their White House showdown roared into a frenetic eight-week final stretch.

  • Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. speaks at a town hall meeting at the Wabash Valley Fairgrounds in Terre Haute, Ind., Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008.  (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
    Historic White House race enters final stretch AP - Sat Sep 6, 2:36 PM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. - They embody four uniquely American stories. They offer messages of transformation with two distinct world views. They pursue one goal.

  • US Senator Edward Kennedy. US scientists have unveiled the most complete genetic profile ever attempted of glioblastoma, a common and deadly form of the brain cancer that Kennedy is battling.(AFP/File/Paul J. Richards)
    Genome analysis used to decode brain cancer: study AFP - Sat Sep 6, 12:07 PM ET

    PARIS (AFP) - US scientists have unveiled the most complete genetic profile ever attempted of glioblastoma, a common and deadly form of the brain cancer that US Senator Edward Kennedy is battling.

  • Rangel had no-interest mortgage more than 10 years AP - Fri Sep 5, 2:45 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Rep. Charles Rangel paid no mortgage interest on a beach resort property for more than 10 years, a lawyer for the powerful House committee chairman said Friday.

  • House Judiciary Wants Answers From FBI Chief on Anthrax CQPolitics.com - Fri Sep 5, 12:35 PM ET

    Members of the House Judiciary Committee made clear Friday they expect more answers from the FBI about its August announcement that a government scientist was responsible for the 2001 anthrax attacks on Capitol Hill and elsewhere.

  • In this Tuesday, June 3, 2008 file photograph, Camille Andrews, right, watches as her husband, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate and New Jersey Rep. Robert Andrews, D-Camden, concedes to incumbent Sen. Frank Lautenberg in the Democratic  primary race, as they stand with daughters Jacquelyn, 15, left, and Josie 13, in Cherry Hill, N.J. On Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008, Andrews  announced his intention to replace his wife on the ballot for his Congressional seat_just five months after she replaced him on the same ballot. (AP Photo/Mel Evans,file)
    NJ's Rep. Rob Andrews planning return to ballot AP - Fri Sep 5, 5:27 AM ET

    CAMDEN, N.J. - U.S. Rep. Rob Andrews said Thursday he intends to seek re-election after all, replacing his wife on the ballot for his congressional seat.

  • Republican presidential nominee John McCain waves near the end of his  acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008.  (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)
    McCain's service time captured in film at RNC AP - Fri Sep 5, 12:17 AM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. - The Republican National Convention's dominant theme of John McCain as war hero was reinforced with a documentary-style film shown to convention delegates before the senator came to the stage to accept his party's presidential nomination.

  • McCain Vows to Change Washington and His Own Party Bloomberg - Thu Sep 4, 11:57 PM ET

    Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Senator John McCain, accepting his party's presidential nomination, said he was the candidate to change the way Washington does business and vowed to ``restore the principles'' of a Republican Party that has ``lost the trust'' of the American people.

  • West Virginia delegates Michael and Nora Ankrom pose with their hats during the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota, on September 3, 2008. American conventions perhaps have to be experienced to be believed. Anyone expecting a real debate about the serious issues facing the country would probably have been disappointed.(AFP/File/Stan Honda)
    Battles for Control of Congress Little Changed by Conventions CQPolitics.com - Thu Sep 4, 9:03 PM ET

    The back-to-back Democratic and Republican extragavanzas gave both parties a chance to put their best foot forward as the general election campaign gets underway. If their competing efforts are a wash, the advantage will remains with the Democrats as far as the push to expand their congressional majorities.

  • House GOP finds drilling champ in Palin Politico - Thu Sep 4, 6:55 PM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. – Sarah Palin’s command performance accepting the Republican vice presidential nomination gives House Republicans a fresh, high-profile champion for the drilling-based energy policies they have fought so hard to publicize all summer.

  • In this Jan. 3, 2006 file photo,  lobbyist Jack Abramoff  leaves Federal Court in Washington. From the time Jack Abramoff began cooperating with the FBI, the once powerful lobbyist knew the day would come when he would have to answer for a lifestyle of trading expensive gifts for political favors. 'I have been thinking about this moment literally for years,' the disgraced power broker wrote a federal judge Wednesday about his sentencing. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
    People convicted in the Abramoff investigation AP - Thu Sep 4, 6:23 PM ET

    Lawmakers, lobbyists, Bush administration officials, congressional staffers and businessmen caught up in the Jack Abramoff public corruption probe:

  • Congressional Candidates in Battleground Contests Skip Conventions CQPolitics.com - Thu Sep 4, 5:23 PM ET

    The parties' national conventions serve as gathering places for the party faithful to fire up their grass-roots voting base and officially select their presidential tickets. They also serve as platforms for congressional incumbents and challengers to draw national attention to their local contests -- that is, if they show up.

  • Andrews CQPolitics.com - Thu Sep 4, 2:07 PM ET

    House Races to Watch

  • A sign hangs outside a foreclosed home in Las Vegas, Nevada in July 2008. The economy may be the number one issue in the White House race, but the Republican National Convention has yet to dwell on the troubles of Americans trying to make ends meet.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Ethan Miller)
    Economy yet to dominate Republican convention AFP - Thu Sep 4, 6:58 AM ET

    ST PAUL, Minnesota (AFP) - The economy may be the number one issue in the White House race, but the Republican National Convention has yet to dwell on the troubles of Americans trying to make ends meet.

  • Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (C) joins his vice presidential running mate Alaska Governor Sarah Palin ontsage after her address to the 2008 Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota September 3, 2008. Palin's husband Todd holds their son Trig at left. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)
    Republicans Head for Clash With McCain, Bush Over Highway Money Bloomberg - Thu Sep 4, 6:17 AM ET

    Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- The site of one of the worst U.S. bridge disasters served as a backdrop yesterday for House Republicans seeking more highway money over the opposition of President George W. Bush and presidential nominee John McCain.

  • Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin waves as Republican presidential candidate John McCain joins her on stage after her speech to the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2008.  (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)
    Republicans nominate McCain for president AP - Thu Sep 4, 12:14 AM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. - Republicans have nominated Sen. John McCain for president, handing the senator the prize that eluded him eight years ago.

  • GOP Offshore Oil Advocates Drill for Support at Convention CQPolitics.com - Wed Sep 3, 8:49 PM ET

    House Republicans have taken their fight for expanded offshore drilling to their party's convention in Minnesota.

  • Senate Democrats to push bipartisan drilling bill AP - Wed Sep 3, 8:24 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Democratic leaders in the Senate plan to push a bipartisan energy proposal that would allow for some expansion of offshore drilling when Congress returns next week from a five-week recess.

  • GOP Pins Hopes for Congressional Comeback on McCain's Appeal CQPolitics.com - Wed Sep 3, 7:47 PM ET

    Presidential conventions are meant to put the best public face on the attending party, promote its national ticket and motivate its activists for the upcoming election. But this week's Republican convention in St. Paul that will nominate Arizona Sen. John McCain for president and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for vice president also is a time of introspection.

  • Defeated in N.J. Senate Primary, Andrews Set to Seek His Old House Seat CQPolitics.com - Wed Sep 3, 6:12 PM ET

    Democratic Rep. Robert E. Andrews appears set to stun New Jersey's political community for the second time this year by announcing that his House re-election bid is back on after he canceled it to run for the Senate, according to the political Web site {@url@PolitickerNJ@http://www.politickernj.com/editor/23089/andrews-will-seek-re-election-house@].

  • Map locating the nuclear facilities in India. The Indian government welcomed a decision by nuclear supplier nations to end the decades-old ban on trading with the country, saying it would propel India's future economic growth.(AFP Graphic/Martin Megino)
    US would stop nuke trade if India tests bomb AP - Wed Sep 3, 4:35 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - A leading Democratic lawmaker has made public a secret Bush administration letter that says the U.S. has the right to immediately stop nuclear trade with India if that country conducts an atomic test.

  • Delegation members crowd the floor during the roll call vote during the Democratic National Convention at the Pepsi Center in Denver on August 27. In a deafening moment of history, Democrats anointed Barack Obama the first black major-party nominee for president, in a cathartic release of unity, hope and tears.(AFP/Paul J. Richards)
    DeLay says Dems better organized Politico - Wed Sep 3, 1:11 PM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. — Democrats could reap electoral rewards from several years of political organizing, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay said, a sentiment echoed by several other prominent conservatives.

  • DeLay to media: "Keep it up" Politico - Wed Sep 3, 12:13 PM ET

    Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay has a message to reporters scrutinizing John McCain's selection of Sarah Palin: "Please, media, keep it up."

  • Kirkpatrick, Hay to fight for House seat AP - Wed Sep 3, 6:13 AM ET

    PHOENIX - A Democrat who raised a hefty amount of money and a Republican lobbyist who has never held elected office will battle each other in November to succeed embattled Republican Rep. Rick Renzi in Arizona's 1st Congressional District.

  • Republican vice-presidential candidate Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney campaign in O'Fallon, Missouri September 1, 2008. (John Gress/Reuters)
    What differences? Bush, Boehner praise McCain AP - Tue Sep 2, 9:06 PM ET

    President Bush, Democrat-turned-independent Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut and former 2008 GOP presidential rival Fred Thompson are slated to speak out forcefully for John McCain at the Republican National Convention Tuesday. Bush and Republican House Minority Leader John Boehner both have been at odds with McCain in the past. Lieberman has consistently sung his praises.

  • RNC and John McCain's communication staff are seen working at the GOP Not Ready 08 Rapid Response Room at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2008. The GOP's operation in Denver revved up Tuesday as the highest profile surrogate for John McCain to date hit the airwaves to slam the Democratic ticket. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
    GOP scales back TV ad plans AP - Tue Sep 2, 7:32 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Republicans' Senate campaign arm called off television ads Tuesday that were to air in New Mexico in the run-up to Election Day, an indication that it's leaving the GOP candidate there to fend for himself as the party braces for losses.

  • Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, answers question about the November election after he was endorsed by the National Rife Association at a sporting goods store in Anchorage, Alaska Wednesday Aug. 27, 2008 as Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, left, listens. If Sen. Ted Stevens wins his seventh full term and refuses to resign in the face of federal charges, it could fall to his colleagues to decide whether he should be expelled. (AP Photo/ Al Grillo)
    FBI taped more than 100 Sen. Stevens phone calls AP - Tue Sep 2, 5:25 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - FBI agents taped more than 100 phone conversations involving Sen. Ted Stevens as part of their public corruption investigation, Stevens' attorneys said Tuesday.

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