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Moniz_confirmation

Senate Confirms Energy Secretary, Stalls on EPA and Labor Nominees

The Senate unanimously confirmed Obama’s choice for Energy but nominees for EPA administrator and Labor secretary are still on hold.
Gina McCarthy

Senate Committee Approves Gina McCarthy EPA Nomination Along Party Lines

Senate Republicans on Thursday eased their opposition to the nomination of Gina McCarthy, President Obama’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency—but her confirmation by the full Senate is not yet assured.

Bush-Era EPA Chief Calls Republicans ‘Sore Losers’

Republicans’ decision to boycott a planned committee vote of President Obama’s nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency makes them look like “sore losers,” says Christine Todd Whitman, EPA administrator under President George W. Bush.
Chris Christie

The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

Science, storms, and demographics are starting to change minds among the rank and file. 
Keystone Pipeline

What People Close to Obama Think About the Keystone XL Pipeline

To environmentalists throughout the country, denying the Keystone XL oil pipeline would be the most important sign President Obama is committed to combating global warming.
Sky

Why Carbon Is So Hard to Regulate

It’s everywhere and touches everything. EPA can crack down, but only by stretching the law. 
Max Baucus

What Will Max Baucus Do With His New Political Freedom?

The Montana senator's retirement could affect legislation on guns, taxes, immigration, and the debt ceiling. If only he'll agree with his fellow Democrats.
West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion

How Will Texas Explosion Impact Chemical Security Laws?

Industry officials 'appalled' by those who say the incident suggests a need for tougher chemical security laws.
Phil Barnett

Phil Barnett, Minority Staff Director, Full Committee

It’s no surprise that Democratic Staff Director Phil Barnett counts climate change among his very top issues. His boss, Energy and Commerce ranking member Henry Waxman, D-Calif., does, too.
Henry Waxman_Betty Sutton_Ed Markey_Bart Stupak

A Polarized Committee Reflects a Gridlocked Congress

Shortly after Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., won the chairmanship of the House Energy and Commerce Committee in December 2010, he invited all the former committee chairmen and their wives to dinner at Carmine’s in downtown Washington.
Lisa Jackson

Waiting for a Clash on Climate Change

In 2011, congressional Republicans put a bull’s-eye on the Environmental Protection Agency.
Fred Upton

5 Things Immigration, Gay Marriage, and Gun Control Have That Climate Change Doesn't

The amount of change happening in Washington is impressive, but this kind of sea change can’t happen right now with energy and climate policy. Here's why.
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The 50 Insiders Who Know Fred Upton Best

Meet the 50 people inside the beltway closest to Upton. The list includes two former and one current Cabinet official, a handful of mostly telecommunications lobbyists, several current and former senior staffers, a Fox journalist and a smattering of other people from many walks of the Washington political life.
Rep. Fred Upton

A Polarized Congress Tests Fred Upton’s Instincts

In the final days of the last Congress, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton spoke out against a bill to provide roughly $50 million to aid the victims of superstorm Sandy.
Rep. Henry Waxman

The ‘Liberal Bulldog’ Takes on His Biggest Challenge

Rep. Henry Waxman, the California liberal who has spent decades battling the tobacco, coal, and pharmaceutical industries, is taking on what appears to be the most insurmountable challenge of his long career.
Gina McCarthy

Why Obama's Environmental Pick Drives Some Republicans Crazy

At her confirmation hearing, Gina McCarthy gets grilled on climate change, regulations, and even instant messaging.
Gina McCarthy EPA Chief

Republicans to Begin New Assault on Obama’s Climate Plans at Hearing for EPA Nominee

The Obama administration and Senate Republicans face off in a high-drama clash over global warming on Thursday, as the president’s choice to lead the Environmental Protection Agency undergoes questioning by the committee considering her nomination.
McConnell Boehner

Agenda Is Stacked for Return of Congress; Obama Will Pile on More With His Budget

The prospects for renewed talks on a long-term deficit-reduction deal reach a pivotal point this week with the release Wednesday of President Obama’s budget plan, which offers cuts to Social Security and Medicare in the hope of softening Republican opposition to tax hikes.
Smoke stacks from the NRG power plant

U.S. Carbon Emissions Hit Lowest Point Since 1994

Carbon emissions have now declined every year since 2007 save for 2010.
Denis McDonough

The Man Who Could Put Climate Change on the Agenda

White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough has a record against global warming—and the president's ear.
Arkansas spill

Why Public Opinion Could Still Stop Keystone

In China, Europe and the U.S., local groups are furious, respectively, over air pollution, shale drilling and oil pipelines. This makes it a dangerous time for oil companies and some governments: A riled public is often the greatest driver of big policy shifts.
Gas station

EPA Finds Sweet Spot to Release Controversial Gas Rule

After facing election-year delays, the Obama administration on Friday announced a controversial rule that requires cleaner gasoline.
Senate Votes

From Hoops to Harry Potter: Behind the Scenes of the Senate's All-Nighter

After four years of waiting, senators unleashed a torrent of budget amendments that pushed the vote-a-rama well into Saturday morning. No wonder everyone looked a little unhinged.  
Keystone XL Pipeline

Why the White House Loves Natural Gas

While green groups protest outside, the president huddles inside the White House with oil and gas executives.
dolphin-pollution

EPA Funding Reductions Have Kneecapped Environmental Enforcement

Budget cuts have greatly diminished the EPA's ability to enforce environmental laws.
Barbara Boxer

Senate Democrats Get Ready to Defend Obama's Climate-Change Rules

Environment and Public Works Chairwoman Sen. Barbara Boxer is mounting a relentless defense of Obama’s global-warming rules.
Hurricane Sandy Wreckage

Why Conservative Economists Will Like Liberal Senators' Plan to Tax Carbon

A pair of Democratic senators just announced legislation that would tax carbon emissions and use the proceeds to fund clean-energy projects and provide rebates to consumers. They know the bill is almost certain to fail in the GOP-majority House. When it does, it will set the stage for the executive...
NRG Energy's W.A. Parish Electric Generating Station

Obama Begins New Push on Climate Agenda

When President Obama addresses Congress in his State of the Union speech tonight, he is widely expected to lay out details of his plan to take on climate change.
budget3

Excuses, Excuses -- Why the White House Keeps Missing Its Budget Deadline

When the White House missed its deadline to release a budget on Monday, Officials did something a little unusual: They wouldn’t say when the blueprint would be released.

Gasoline Rule Emerges From Election-Year Obscurity

After facing election-year delays, an environmental rule requiring cleaner gasoline is now back in the regulatory pipeline, and a top Environmental Protection Agency official said Wednesday the agency expects to propose the rule by March.

GOP Insiders Daring Dems Over Climate Change

Don't hold your breath for bipartisan consensus on climate change just yet -- at least not if National Journal's Political Insiders have something to say about it. Asked whether it had become a winning issue for Democrats, nearly 9 out of 10 Republican Insiders said no, with a little over a third of Democratic Insiders agreeing that climate change was not among the issues on which Democrats can capitalize. Has climate change become a winning issue for Democrats?   Democrats (101 votes) Republicans (92 votes) Yes 64% 12% No 36% 88%
GolmacherOpener

The Waxman-Berman Machine Finally Shuts Down

For more than two decades in Southern California, if you wanted to run for office, you had to deal with the team of Howard Berman and Henry Waxman. That era is officially over with Berman’s loss last fall.
Empty Office

Frustrated Aides Leaving Capitol Hill

Fed up with gridlock, legislative staffers who specialize in energy and environment are fleeing.
Barack Obama Delivers Inaugural Address on Jan. 21, 2013

Obama's Climate Vow Could Make EPA a Political Target

President Obama’s second Inaugural Address left no doubt about his desire to put climate change front and center in his second term. He’s likely to pursue his goals through executive actions rather than legislation, at least initially.
Barbara Boxer

Democratic Senators Pass Torch to EPA on Climate Change

After years of trying—and failing—to get climate-change legislation through Congress, top Senate Democrats are publicly ready to hand over the power to President Obama and the Environmental Protection Agency.
Grover Norquist

Congress Feels the Heat on Idea of Carbon Tax

Moments after the fiscal-cliff deal passed the House on New Year’s Day, Grover Norquist, the powerful antitax lobbyist, tweeted, “Obama’s budget adds ten trillion more debt. We cut more spending or he smashes average Americans with energy taxes. I vote: cut his spending.”

Lisa Jackson Stepping Down as EPA Head

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson will be stepping down after President Obama’s State of the Union address in January. Jackson, the first black head of the EPA and the fourth woman to hold the job, has spent much of her tenure at the center of the energy and environment debate in Washington and was often criticized for the agency’s controversial Clean Air Act regulations. The EPA during her tenure has undertaken several significant regulatory actions, including setting new standards to clean up mercury and other toxic emissions from coal power plants, establishing new fuel economy and greenhouse gas standards for motor vehicles and setting new standards to limit fine particle soot in the air. The EPA also reversed course from the Bush administration's policies and declared that climate change posed a real threat to the environment. Critics have accused the EPA of overreach and of putting in place “job-killing” regulations at a time of economic weakness. In the last year, Jackson and her colleagues have been grilled by congressional committees on the agency’s environmental rules and their effects on energy industries and economic recovery. The GOP-led House has passed laws trying to block or delay EPA regulations. Jackson, 50, was born in Pennsylvania, but grew up in New Orleans. She spent 16 years at the EPA and six years at the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection prior to becoming EPA administrator.

News Roundup: EPA Administrator Jackson Resigns

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is stepping down, The New York Timesreports.

Is Washington Ready For a Carbon Tax?

Should President Obama and Congress pursue a carbon tax?
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