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Around the Hill

First Run

Reagan Aids Pence’s Initial Quest for Congressional Seat

In 1988, three years into his law career, Mike Pence (R) turned his focus on ousting Democratic Rep. Philip Sharp (Ind.). Pence relied heavily on negative campaigning, including attacks on Sharp for his reliance on political action committee contributions. The 29-year-old Pence even earned a Blue Room photo opportunity with then-President Ronald Reagan — “I felt like I was talking to Mt. Rushmore,” Pence would later say — that August. And yet, Pence fell to Sharp, who defeated the Republican again two years later. He finally won a seat in the House on his third try, in November 2000.

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Rumi Pazos, 6, and his mother, Christi Funk, from Orange County, Ca., attend a news conference Tuesday in front of the Capitol on the Safe Chemical Act, which would update the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976. To support the bill, Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families rallied moms, nurses and cancer survivors to participate in a “stroller brigade” throughout the Capitol complex.
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Defense Sequester Policy Briefing

Defense Sequester Policy Briefing

Nobody seems to like the automatic Pentagon spending cuts set for January, but there is little Congressional agreement on an alternative.

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