Skip to content
1 - /townhall/Kasich1/ -- Capitol Hill Town Hall Series
TRENDING:
Advertisement

Jeff Denham

Latest Stories

12172018_absent-steve-knight8201.jpg

12172018_absent-steve-knight8201.jpg

Rep. Steve Knight, California Republican, (left), and Rep. Jeff Denham, California Republican, (right), have both been largely absent from Congress since losing their re-election bids in the midterm election.

f41a58724ddb6e13540f6a70670065bd.jpg

f41a58724ddb6e13540f6a70670065bd.jpg

FILE -- In this July 23, 2013 file photo is Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, before the House Judiciary subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security hearing; "Addressing the Immigration Status of Illegal Immigrants Brought to the United States as Children". Denham, whose district is in California's agricultural heartland of the San Joaquin Valley, is not worried that Congress' failure to pass immigration legislation will hurt his reelection.(AP Photo/Evan Vucci,file)

64d6d87540b16b0d500f6a706700a36d.jpg

64d6d87540b16b0d500f6a706700a36d.jpg

FILE - This July 28, 2011 file photo shows Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., left, on Capitol Hill in Washington. House Republicans are pushing a plan to give young immigrants brought to the country illegally by their parents a path to resident status if they join the U.S. military. Rep. Jeff Denham of California said Friday he would press for a vote on his legislation either as a free-standing bill or as an addition to the defense authorization measure that the House will consider in May. Denham immediately faced conservative opposition. Brooks circulated a letter among his colleagues opposing any attempt to add immigration legislation to the defense bill. His intent was to collect as many signatures as possible and deliver the letter to House leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)