WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Republicans will gather behind closed doors on Wednesday to pick their next leader in the ...
John Thune, R-S.D., as the new Senate majority leader as longtime ... Pro-life advocacy groups, which constitute an essential ...
Senate Republicans have elected Sen. John Thune (R-SD) – who has long been hostile to LGBTQ+ rights – as the next Senate ...
Thune, of South Dakota, beat out Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Rick Scott of Florida in a secret ballot election to replace Mitch McConnell.
Because it's a secret vote, we don't know exactly who voted for Thune to be the Senate Majority Leader, but we know a few of his public supporters.
The outcome of the secret leadership ballot, expected after the November election, is deeply uncertain. It’s a weighty choice ...
The pragmatic establishment figure who offers candid political takes as McConnell’s voter-counter is someone Democrats say is ...
Republicans have elected South Dakota Sen. John Thune as the next Senate majority leader, completing a momentous shift in ...
Republicans have elected South Dakota senator, John Thune, as the next Senate majority leader replacing Mitch McConnell as ...
A look at the three candidates: Thune, 63, defeated then-Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle in 2004 after arguing during the campaign that Daschle had lost his South Dakota roots during his years in ...
Both Thune and Johnson will face significant challenges ahead, but the early results for competent Republican congressional governance are encouraging.