WASHINGTON, D.C. - The recent shutdown has lasted 40 days, making it the longest in U.S. history. Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin noted the toll on federal employees ...
WASHINGTON As open enrollment for 2026 individual market health insurance plans has begun and Americans across the country ...
Back from Washington. D.C., Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin says he has no regrets about his controversial vote ending the ...
FOX 32 Chicago on MSN
Sen. Dick Durbin defends vote with Republicans to end government shutdown
Dick Durbin defended his decision to vote to end the longest government shutdown in history, against the wishes of many in ...
Illinois' senior U.S. senator, Dick Durbin, defended his vote to reopen the federal government after the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. After 40 days, Durbin was one of eight senators -- ...
Dozens of Black pastors from around Illinois gathered to deliver an ecumenical endorsement in the U.S. Senate race, rallying ...
Not quite. Senators finalized their vote to end the government shutdown on Monday, Nov. 10. They had previously voted in ...
Longtime Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, who rose to prominence in the Senate during nearly three decades of service, has announced he won’t seek reelection. Durbin, set to turn 82 just after the 2026 ...
Slingshot News on MSN
'Let Me Tell You A Story': Dick Durbin Introduces GOP Colleagues To The Illegal Misdeeds Of Pardoned Jan. 6 Rioters In Senate Hearing
During a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing today, Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) shined a spotlight on some of the Jan. 6 criminals who were pardoned by Donald Trump.
The retiring senator was among a handful of Democratic lawmakers to help Republicans reopen the federal government after the longest-ever shutdown.
Mediaite on MSN
Top Senate Dem Acknowledges Deal to End Shutdown Relies on GOP Leader Keeping His Word
Durbin: I 'cannot accept a strategy which wages political battle at the expense of my neighbor's paycheck or the food for his children' ...
WASHINGTON — The top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee called Tuesday for lawmakers “to bring down the temperature” following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. “I came ...
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