AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

NJ Topics Cabinet

Obama

Scandals? What Scandals? This Week Is Historical for Another Reason

Years from now, this past week may be remembered less for developments in a spate of White House scandals than as a turning point in the "war on terror."
Submarine

Nuclear Arsenal Subject to Pentagon Cuts, But New Subs May Escape Ax

"Every part of the program, including nuclear weapons, is being addressed," said a senior Defense official.
Barack Obama, Caren Bohan, Jimmey Kimmel

Play of the Day: Everyone Has Awkward Prom Photos

Fast forward to 1:00 to see the how Obama talked to girls in high school.
Reince Priebus

How Reince Priebus Crossed the Line

By arguing Obama is part of "lawlessness," he's undermining the credibility of the opposition.
Keystone Pipeline

Graphic: Keystone XL: More Than a Pipeline

The House on Wednesday is scheduled to vote on—and probably pass—legislation sponsored by Rep. Lee Terry, R-Neb., that would approve the Keystone XL pipeline and limit legal challenges on the project. The politically embroiled pipeline has been awaiting federal approval since September 2008 and its fate is still uncertain. Despite action by House Republicans, the State Department is expected to make a final decision later this year or early next. Here's what you need to know about a pipeline that's become much more than that.
pod thumb

Play of the Day: Kids Say The Darndest Things... About Obama’s Scandals

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Insiders Split on Edits of Benghazi Talking Points

National Journal's National Security Insiders were split on whether the Obama administration's edits to remove any mention of terrorism from the original public statements on the Benghazi, Libya, attack that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens showed it deliberately tried to mislead the American public.
Jacob Lew

Are Treasury and the Fed at Odds Over Big Banks?

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew keeps hands off as Wall Street giants grow larger.
Tense Obama

5 Ways Obama Can Restore the Public's Trust and Rescue His Presidency

Painful choices include a special prosecutor on the IRS and an apology for The Associated Press.    
Eric Holder

You Know What Really Risks National Security? Leak Investigations.

What happens if national security journalists stop trusting government warnings?
tornado

Oklahoma Tornado Fallout: Disaster Assistance, Weather Detection Spending Cut in Sequestration

As disaster personnel and volunteers comb through the havoc left by the tornadoes that tore through Oklahoma on Sunday and Monday, they are going to rely on critical federal funding that was severely reduced by the massive cuts known as sequestration and which raises the possibility that Congress will have to cough up more money on future disasters.
Memorial Day Parade

How the GOP Will Keep Stirring the Scandal Stew Over Recess

Congressional Republicans head into next week’s Memorial Day recess armed with a strategy designed to keep the controversies that have consumed Washington in the news back home.
Obama

Obama Distances Himself From Bush Foreign Policy Legacy

Even though he followed many of his predecessor's counterterrorism policies, Obama wants to move on.
Christopher Smith

Much at Stake as Energy Department Weighs Permits for Exporting Natural Gas

Christopher Smith, the Energy Department official in charge of shaping the Obama administration’s policy on exporting natural gas, recalls working for Chevron on an import facility during the first part of the last decade. At the time, U.S. reserves were thought to be scarce and fuel prices were accordingly high.
Jack Lew Discusses the 2013 FSOC Annual Report

Ready to Testify on Financial Stability, Lew Is Likely To Be Grilled on IRS Scandal

The poor Financial Stability Oversight Council. It's likely this will be the second year in a row where testimony on the council's annual report turns into a grill-a-thon on the scandal du jour.
Lisa Murkowski

House Passes Keystone Bill For the Seventh Time, With the Same Result Likely

For the seventh straight time, the bill—approved on a 241-175 vote—is likely to have little substantive effect.
Iraq

Can Obama End the 'Forever War'?

Ahead of Thursday's speech, the president is trying to narrow the use of drones.
Gabriel Gomez

Obama's Troubles Could Put Massachusetts Senate Seat In Play -- Again

In 2010, Republicans won a special election during a low point of Obama's presidency. Will it happen again?
Cab Driver

Why Your Taxi Driver Is Smarter Than You Are

Lawmakers in the immigration debate are neglecting the issue of whether newcomers assimilate once they have legal status. 
Darrell Issa

Eric Holder Calls Rep. Darrell Issa 'Unacceptable and Shameful'

This much is clear: Attorney General Eric Holder and Rep. Darrell Issa don't like each other. 
Mac Collins

Congress: The Next Generation

Former lawmakers are helping their children in so many races this year that we might as well dub next Election Day “Take Your Kid to Congress Day.”
IRS

More Scrutiny Ahead for the IRS

Think the Internal Revenue Service scandal will fade away in time for summer? That may be wishful thinking on the part of the White House and congressional Democrats, who are poised to endure another week of congressional hearings in both the House and Senate.
Boehner and Cantor

House Republicans Say They Can Legislate and Investigate at the Same Time

House Republicans are pushing back against a prominent conservative group’s suggestion that congressional leaders should avoid scheduling potentially divisive votes which could shift the media spotlight away from the White House’s recent woes.
IRS building

Congressional Republicans Are Milking the Scandals for Everything

GOP members in both chambers finally feel like they have something to hang around the president’s neck. 
President Obama in Rose Garden

Obama Pushes to Accommodate, Not Protect, Freedom of the Press

Unconstitutional. Sweeping. Secretive. Abusive. Harassing.
Eric Holder

Eric Holder in the Hot Seat as Congress Probes Scandals

The Attorney General is on Capitol Hill on today for a show of fireworks that could be unlike any seen in this Congress so far.
Democrats in Triage Mode

Democrats in Triage Mode on White House Scandals

Congressional Democrats – knowing the fate of a progressive agenda and their own priorities lie with the continued political strength of the White House – hope to treat the emerging scandals independently. 
Eric Holder

What’s the Case for the Justice Department Seizing the AP’s Records?

Eric Holder’s former top spokesman argues the Attorney General wants to crack down on leakers—but not journalists.
holder

Why the AP Phone Records Bombshell Could Threaten Eric Holder's Job

If Obama wants a high-level symbol of accountability, the attorney general is the only one left standing.
Gina McCarthy

GOP Forces Gridlock Over Obama’s Nominees for EPA, Labor

Senate Republicans are forcing partisan debates about the role of the executive branch and its commitment to transparency by blocking the confirmation of two of President Obama’s nominees to top positions within his administration.
Nikola Swann

The U.S. Is Not ‘Credit-Positive’

If the debt-ceiling debate doesn’t bring real reform, says the S&P analyst in charge of grading government creditworthiness, get ready for another downgrade. 
Gina McCarthy

Who's In and Who's Out in Obama's Cabinet

President Obama has chosen many of the candidates for his second-term Cabinet, but he still has eight positions left to fill. Here's a look at which positions are open, the leading contenders to fill them, and the Cabinet choices he has already made.
Obama Rain

IRS, AP subpoena, Benghazi--and the Turkish Prime Minister Makes Obama's Life Worse

The president's Rose Garden press conference.
Holder

With the IRS Scandal Ablaze, How Does that Special-Prosecutor Thing Work?

While the Justice Department has started an investigation into whether the IRS broke any laws by signaling out conservative groups, administration critics will likely continue their call for a special prosecution to further investigate any criminal wrongdoing from top officials.
pod thumb

Play of the Day: A Bad Week for the White House

Fast forward to 3:45 to see Stewart explain how Obama learns important information.
holder obama

What the AP Subpoena Scandal Means for Your Electronic Privacy

The Justice Department’s attempt to spy on journalists working for the Associated Press is an abuse of power in the broadest sense. But one reason the whole episode is controversial at all is because the Obama administration technically broke no rules.
Anthony Foxx

What You Need to Know About Obama Transportation Pick Anthony Foxx

The White House made a smart political move choosing the young up-and-coming political star from North Carolina.
play of day thumb

Play of the Day: The Salad of Obama Scandals

Fast forward to 2:40 to see Stephen Colbert show how Eric Holder held up in a hearing against a representative who didn't exactly use his words correctly.

Poll: How Damaging Is the IRS Controversy to Obama?

Most Republicans and half of Democrats say the issue will haunt the president.
GREG HICKS

Insiders Split on Whether White House Covered Up Benghazi Response

National Security Insiders say the U.S. has made missions more secure in the wake of the attack.
defcad 3d printed gun

How 3D-Printed Guns Violate International Arms Controls (or Maybe Not)

The State Department has ordered the world’s first manufacturer of the 3D-printed gun to take down his blueprints from the Internet.
Obama announces Cabinet nominations

Obama Reshapes Cabinet For a Second Term

With Inauguration Day approaching, President Obama is reshaping his Cabinet and White House staff for his second term. In the latest change, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has said he will leave his job at the end of March, creating an opening at the helm of the agency that oversees public lands.
Obama and Clinton

Hillary Clinton Has the Most to Lose From Obama's Scandals

It's not just Benghazi. By tying herself closely to Obama, she'll have trouble distancing herself if scandal worsens.
Stephane Herseth Sandlin

Obama's Struggles Hampering Democratic Recruitment

It's tough to persuade Democrats to run in a challenging political environment.
Don't Tread on Me Flag

Tea Party Victims Detail Intimidation, Claim Vindication

The tax collector's actions confirm the worst fears of conservatives.
John Hamre

Former U.S. National Security Leaders Object to ‘More Restrictive’ Nuclear Trade Policies

A half-dozen former U.S. national security leaders last month implored President Obama to avoid tightening restrictions on foreign nuclear cooperation in the interest of nonproliferation.
Eric Cantor

Eric Cantor’s Caucus Thwarts His Push for an Alternative Agenda

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor has learned, to his chagrin, that solving problems, much less finding compromises, is not on the agenda of a majority of his House Republican colleagues.
Eric Holder

Holder Holds Up in House Judiciary Hearing, but More Attacks Coming

The face-off between Attorney General Eric Holder and some Republican House members during Wednesday’s House Judiciary Committee hearing seemed more like the opening shots of a battle than any real showdown.
U.S. Consulate in Benghazi

Under Pressure, the White House Releases More Than 100 Pages of Benghazi E-Mails

The White House, in an effort to calm the swirl of controversy about the reaction to last year’s attacks on U.S. diplomats in Benghazi, Libya, late Wednesday released more than 100 pages of e-mails leading to the development of talking points that attempted to explain the violence that left four Americans dead. The e-mails had earlier been shown to members of Congress but the White House had resisted releasing them, citing the precedent of protecting internal discussions within an administration.
Cantor

Eric Cantor’s Caucus Thwarts His Push for an Alternative Agenda

Readers of It’s Even Worse Than It Looks know that I have not always treated House Majority Leader Eric Cantor kindly. I have excoriated him for engineering the debt-ceiling crisis in 2011 as a hostage-taking exercise, and then blowing up the talks between President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner that could have led to a grand bargain. Cantor himself recently took credit for the latter in a profile written by Ryan Lizza in The New Yorker. He told Lizza “that it was a ‘fair assessment’ that he talked Boehner out of accepting Obama’s deal. He said he told Boehner that it would be better, instead, to take the issues of taxes and spending to the voters and ‘have it out’ with the Democrats in the election. Why give Obama an enormous political victory, and potentially help him win reelection, when they might be able to negotiate a more favorable deal with a new Republican president? Boehner told Obama there was no deal. Instead of a grand bargain, Cantor and the House Republicans made a grand bet.”
Treasury's Jan Eberly briefs reporters on Sept. 14, 2012

Treasury Department's Chief Economist Bids Farewell

A Q&A with the Treasuary Department's cheif economist on her last day on the job.

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.
Joe Lieberman

Lieberman Backs GOP Line on Security Failures in Boston Marathon Attack

Joe Lieberman gave a boost to a Republican line of attack against the Obama administration for failing to fully investigate and share information that might have prevented the Boston bombings.
immigration prayers

How the Ongoing Scandals Might Actually Aid Bipartisanship on Immigration Reform

If Republicans assume a hyper-partisan stance on IRS, DOJ, and Benghazi, they may have room to act in a bipartisan manner when it comes to immigration.
Kathleen Sebelius

Search for ‘Obamacare’ Funding Angers Lawmakers

With money and time running out to implement the president’s health care law, administration officials are looking for funding wherever they can find it—and angering members of Congress along the way.
Kids at the opening day of the 112th Congress #2

Congress: The Next Generation

Former lawmakers are helping their children in so many races this year that we might as well dub next Election Day Take Your Kid to Congress Day. Republican businessman Mike Collins announced Thursday that he'll run for Rep. Paul Broun's open seat in Georgia. Funny enough, his father, former Rep. M...
Hillary Clinton

Play of the Day: A Look at 2016

Fast forward to 3:10 to see Fallon compare the two on important issues.
Robert Bork

Congress Has Outsized Influence Over Obama's Cabinet

President Obama is allowing the personnel moves that will become critical in forming his foreign policy legacy to be influenced -- even decided -- by Congress
Fracking

New Fracking Rules Have Environmental Groups Worried

The energy industry is optimistic about new regulations for hydraulic fracturing expected to be issued as soon as Tuesday.
Barack Obama

Insiders: Syrian Chemical Weapons Use Does Not Yet Justify U.S. Military Intervention

Even though President Obama acknowledged chemical weapons use in Syria, nearly two-thirds of National Journal's National Security Insiders believe the American military should not yet intervene in the bloody fight against Bashar al-Assad.
PEOPLE-Comics2

Life in Politics Can Be Comic

While tens of thousands of people make a living in politics, Darren Davis seems to have discovered a niche in political comics.
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.
hydraulic fracturing

Proposed 'Fracking' Rules Anger Environmentalists, Annoy Industry

The Obama administration on Thursday unveiled a new proposal for its first major regulation of hydraulic fracturing on public lands, attempting to address at least a portion of the controversial drilling practice that’s unlocked vast new supplies of U.S. oil and gas but has also raised fears about its environmental impact, particularly on local water supplies.
Protesters

8 Figures That Will Define the Keystone XL Fight Over the Next 45 Days

The State Department's recent report is seen as a signal the pipeline is likely to be approved, but it's not the final word.
FAA, Airport

Play of the Day: Fixing the Sequester

Fast forward to 5:25 to see the name of the bill.
Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton's Allies Come to Her Rescue Over Benghazi

Paul Begala says Republican critics are wearing 'tin foil hats'. Ann Lewis blames the right-wing.  Welcome to the 1990s.
Rikers Island Penal Complex

How Goldman Sachs Can Help Save the Safety Net

A novel idea would make private investors in charge of funding social services. Will it catch on? 
Energy Star appliance

Will New Oil Reserves Tempt Americans Back Into Wastefulness?

Recently discovered reserves suggest fossil fuels will last longer than we thought. But the economy won’t grow if Americans don’t use that energy efficiently. 
Obama Holder

Scandals Tailor-Made For GOP Base

George W. Bush lost control of Congress when voters lost trust of his ability to manage government. Obama faces the same threat in 2014.
Food Stamps

Next Stops for Farm Bill: Senate and House Floors

The House Agriculture Committee prides itself on bipartisanship, but when the panel met Wednesday to consider a new farm bill, the deep cultural divides between its Republican majority and Democratic minority members were in full relief.
Attorney General Holder Testifies On Justice Department FY2011 Budget

Eric Holder Offers Little Information, Much Ire for Republicans

It only took Attorney General Eric Holder a few moments to make clear he wanted no part of congressional Republicans’ plans to turn his Capitol Hill appearance into a serious grilling about the scandals of the day.

Obama Releases Legal Opinion on Drones

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE OBAMA RELEASES LEGAL OPINIONS ON DRONES. President Obama ordered the Justice Department to provide congressional intelligence committees with access to classified information on the legal rationale for dro...
Oklahoma City Bombing

Should Prosecutors Insist on Death for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev?

Cutting a deal with the alleged Boston bomber might prevent future attacks and ensure a conviction. But it could enrage victims and disappoint the public. 
Syria

Iraq and Libya Haunt Obama's Syria Policy

Weighed down by memories of Iraq and Libya, the president stands his ground.
Gregory Hicks

Deputy Mission Chief Says He Was 'Stunned' by Rice's Early Depiction of Benghazi Attacks

The top deputy to the U.S. ambassador killed during the attacks last September in Benghazi, Libya, said Wednesday he was “stunned” when U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice said on talk shows days later that the incident stemmed from “demonstrations” sparked by protests over an anti-Islamic video.
tea party protest

As Washington Is Scandalized, The Tea Party Salivates

The swirl of Washington scandal offers the movement a kind of “I-told-you-so” bragging rights.
Barbara and Harry Sheinfelds

When Retirement Keeps Getting Further Away

The Sheinfelds had raised their children and were finally poised to retire. They were (understandably) naive to think it would be that easy. 
Russia

What Moscow's Arrest Says About U.S.-Russia Relationship

As the U.S. and Russia go through the motions of expelling each other’s “diplomats” in the coming days, it’s likely they will only be pawns in a much bigger game.
COP Foreclosure Hearing

How Many House Committees Are Currently Probing the Obama Administration?

A look at which House committees have inquiries into Obama Administration issues
Shoes

America's Next National Security Risk: Footwear?

The keys to a strong military are coordinated intelligence efforts, high-tech weaponry, and good shoes – American-made shoes, that is, according to certain members of the sneaker lobby.
NRA

Obama's Lobby-Busting Second Term

Emboldened by reelection and a fiscal-cliff deal, President Obama is picking fights with two of the most powerful special interests in Washington: the pro-gun and pro-Israel lobbies.
obama cameron

Obama's Outrage Focused on Republicans More Than IRS

At press briefing with British Prime Minister David Cameron, Obama slams Benghazi investigation as partisan.
McCain and Graham

Senators Focus on Information Breakdown in Boston Attack

In the wake of the Boston Marathon attack, lawmakers are focusing on whether federal law enforcement botched information it had about the deceased suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011 and whether post-Sept. 11 information-sharing security measures broke down.
Frack

The U.S. Has Much, Much More Gas and Oil Than We Thought

The United States has double the amount of oil and three times the amount of natural gas than previously thought stored deep under the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana, according to new data the Obama administration released Tuesday.

Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton End Marriage of Convenience with "60 Minutes" Lovefest

In a “60 Minutes” interview raising eyebrows in status-obsessed Washington, outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she and President Obama buried the hatchet after their 2008 campaign “because we both love our country.” Obama called Clinton one of the greatest diplomats in U.S. history.
Business Education

House to Tackle Student-Loan Rates

House Republicans are preparing to pass legislation that would remedy, once and for all, the looming problem of student-loan interest rates.
Boston aftermath

Insiders: Boston Bombings Should Not Change Terror Policies for Soft Targets

Two-thirds of National Journal's National Security Insiders said the U.S. government does not need to reassess its policies to prevent attacks at high-profile events in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings. But Insiders' opinions are more evenly divided on U.S. intervention in Syria.
Justice Department Announces Lawsuit Against Arpaio

What You Need to Know About Obama's Labor Secretary Pick, Thomas Perez

President Obama will nominate Thomas Perez, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, as the next Labor secretary, according to a White House official. Here is what you need to know about Perez.
Thomas Perez

What You Need to Know About Obama's Labor Secretary Pick, Thomas Perez

Obama has chosen Thomas Perez as the next Labor secretary. Here's what you need to know about him.
Jay Carney

The Art of Denying Cabinet Rumors

White House press secretary Jay Carney leaves Cabinet announcements to the man who actually makes the nominations: President Obama. Reporters know this, but it doesn’t stop them from asking about rumored candidates anyway.
US Mexico Border

The Border Hawks Have Already Won

The Senate immigration bill already addresses hard-liner concerns, which means they’ll have less reason to oppose the final product. 
Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel, I-64

Why You Won’t Own Your Road

Cash-strapped states such as Virginia are turning to the private sector to help finance large infrastructure projects.
Joe Lieberman

GOP Leans on Lieberman in Boston Probe

Putting the former independent senator in an attack-dog role gives Republicans political cover to keep pressing for answers on intelligence and law enforcement failures ahead of the Boston bombings.  
Max Baucus and Dave Camp

Overhauling the Tax Code With 'Max and Dave'

Max Baucus and Dave Camp, Congress's top tax-writers, are taking their message to the Internet in hopes of building public support for their efforts.
Oregon execution room

Will Prosecutors in the Boston Marathon Bombing Case Seek the Death Penalty?

Former prosecutors weigh in on the legal strategy for taking on bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

Poll: What Impact Will the Boston Bombings Have on Immigration Reform?

Neither party’s Insiders expect much of an effect.
Statue of Liberty

How Refugees Come Into the United States

The United States has a fairly generous policy in admitting foreigners to the country as refugees, harkening back to the 1950s when several laws were passed to provide for people who escaped communist regimes.
Obama and Clinton

Why Benghazi is a Blow to Obama and Clinton

Both parties are wrong about the scandal: It’s not Watergate and it’s not nothing.
obama targeted

How the White House Scandals Could Hurt Republicans, Too

By enraging the base and strengthening the faction least willing to compromise with Obama, the IRS and Benghazi affairs could hurt a GOP shot at the presidency.
Benghazi

Benghazi: Incompetence, But No Cover-up

The hearings deepen the tragedy, but not the scandal.
Boston Marathon bomings

The Boston Bombs Remind Us That We’re Not Safe

Just because law enforcement officials learned how to track terrorists doesn’t mean we’re not at risk. 
Obama announcement on IRS

You Want Angry? I'll Show You Angry, Obama Says on IRS Scandal

Facing criticism from Republicans, the president reasserts his authority by pushing out the IRS's acting commissioner.
Chuck Hagel

Chuck Hagel's Independent Streak Backfires

It was Sen. Lindsey Graham’s turn. Republican senator after Republican senator had grilled Chuck Hagel over his comments in 2008 that “the Jewish lobby intimidates a lot of people” to do “dumb things.” The South Carolina Republican jumped right in.
Round up

Is the U.S. Government Complicit in the Killing of Over a Thousand Wild Horses?

A bipartisan pair of lawmakers is urging Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to disclose whether as many as 1,700 federally protected wild horses now unaccounted for were sold to a middleman who illegally transported them to Mexico for slaughter.
pelosi-carney

Democrats See the IRS Scandal as the Most Toxic

In triage mode, Congressional Democrats want to treat (and separate themselves from) the trio of this week's scandals one-by-one.
Carmen Ortiz

4 Things To Know About Boston Bombings Prosecutor Carmen Ortiz

Once a rising political star, the U.S. Attorney heading the Boston Marathon case could use the spotlight to regain her luster.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev

How Tamerlan Tsarnaev Might Have Been Stopped

Did the Obama administration fail to follow up on Muslim community outreach programs?
Boston marathon

Defense Department Saves National Guard WMD Unit That Helped in Boston

The U.S. Defense Department was poised as recently as last month to dismantle a National Guard crisis team that assisted in the emergency response to the bombings at Monday's Boston Marathon. 
Obama

Obama: Boston Marathon Bombings Are Acts of Terrorism

President adds little is known about the perpetrators of the attack.
Senate Immigration

Asylum and Entry/Exit Systems Get Another Look in Congress After Boston

The impact of the bombings on the immigration debate has narrowed in on just two isolated policy arenas.
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.

Insiders: North Korean Threat Serious, U.S. Response Appropriate

North Korea's saber rattling is a serious threat, National Journal's National Security Insiders say, and they overwhelmingly approve of the Obama administration's response.
Syria

Obama Is Looking for Reasons to Delay Response to Syria's Chemical-Weapons Use

The White House is not eager to engage militarily in the Middle East again.

Poll: Will the Gang of Eight’s Immigration-Reform Proposal Help Your Party?

Democratic and Republican Insiders have high hopes, but for different reasons. 

Poll: What Are the Chances Congress Will Pass a Major Tax-Reform Bill?

A majority of Insiders say prospects are poor.
Kathleen Sebelius

After the Obama Administration's Morning-After Pill Decision

President Obama has made a series of speeches in recent weeks, delighting scientists who work on controversial areas of research and advocates for reproductive and abortion rights.
fast Food Counter at Airport

Characteristics of the Minimum-Wage Workforce

The Labor Department has released figures that reveal much about economic differences among minimum-wage earners, especially people of color and Americans from various socioeconomic classes.
Korea soldiers

Amid Deep Cuts, the Pentagon Labors to Keep Its Forces Ready for Korea

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Obama and Hagel

Vast Majority of National Security Insiders Want Hagel, Brennan Confirmed

Washington is abuzz with speculation about whether hawks’ opposition will derail the confirmation of former Sen. Chuck Hagel as Defense secretary. But 82 percent of National Journal’s National Security Insiders support it.
Arturo Rodriguez

Agricultural Workers and Farmers Unite to Push Congress on Immigration Reform

The sight of the head of the United Farm Workers and farmer representatives testifying side by side before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday to promote the farmworker section of the immigration-reform bill was an extraordinary moment in American agriculture.
Chris Christie

The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

Science, storms, and demographics are starting to change minds among the rank and file. 
Karen Christian

Karen Christian, Majority Chief Counsel, Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee

Karen Christian, chief counsel for the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, is best known for her lead role in the Solyndra investigation, which dominated much of the GOP agenda on the committee during the last Congress.
Gas prices

Companies Battle, With Gas Prices at Stake

The lobbying fight over how much natural gas the United States should export has picked up considerably this year.
Graham

Obama’s Pick for Energy Secretary Blocked Over Cuts at S.C. Nuclear-Waste Plant

In his recent confirmation hearing, Ernest Moniz told senators that one of his very first trips as Energy secretary would be to Hanford, the troublesome nuclear-waste site in Washington state. But Moniz might be wise to detour down to South Carolina on his way in light of a move Tuesday by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to block his confirmation.
Hagel

Hagel Pick Could Signal U.S. Policy Shift on Iran

President Obama might be signaling plans to shift his administration's approach to an entrenched dispute over Iran's nuclear program by nominating a noted critic of hard-line policies to lead the Defense Department, a former Iranian nuclear negotiator and other expert observers said on Tuesday.
House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn

Congressional Black Caucus Pushes Clyburn for Transportation Secretary

The Congressional Black Caucus is lobbying President Obama to name Assistant House Democratic Leader James Clyburn, D-S.C., as his new transportation secretary.
Boston Inquiry

House Homeland Security Committee Plans Hearing on Boston Attack for Next Week

The House Homeland Security Committee plans to hold the first congressional hearing next week examining the Boston Marathon terrorist attack and what it says about the state of the nation’s post-Sept. 11 security infrastructure.
Penny Pritzker

Four Things to Know About Penny Pritzker, a Billionaire and Obama's Commerce Secretary Pick

President Obama nominated Chicago mogul and longtime friend Penny Pritzker for Commerce secretary. Here’s what you need to know about her.
bitcoin

How Washington Plans to Regulate Your Bitcoins

Spoiler: It (mostly) won't.
An unemployed man talks on the phone with a state unemployment worker at the state unemployment and career office in San Francisco.

Jobs Report: Employment Remains Scarce for Minorities

The largely unchanged jobs report means that unemployment numbers for people of color, which typically have been bleaker than national averages, unfortunately are holding steady.
President Barack Obama, Boston Marathon

Obama Vows Justice Against Those Responsible for Boston Attacks

President stops short of labeling Boston Marathon bombings as terrorism.
TSA

Living With the Nuances, Ironies, and Flexibility of Sequestration

Now that sequestration is here to stay, we all have to learn to live with it.
McCain

If You Want a Friend in Washington…Don't Call John McCain

At Hagel's confirmation hearing, the Arizona senator hammers his "old friend" in a ritual display of D.C. hypocrisy.
thumb for construction

D.C. Landmarks Under Construction

The Washington Monument, the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials, and other D.C. iconic structures in states of assembly.
 Michele Bachmann

'Obamacare' Repeal: Will the 37th Time Be the Charm?

With tensions over fiscal issues building, and the three-month suspension of the nation’s debt limit set to expire Sunday, lawmakers this week will be rehashing on the House floor their messaging war over repealing President Obama’s three-year-old health care law.

Arne Duncan's Distracting Gaffe

Education Secretary Arne Duncan had a rough week. I can't recap his shenanigans leading up to the sequestration any better than Education Week's Alyson Klein. Check out her post on the topic here.
Ernest Moniz, Obama's Reported Pick to Head the Energy Department

Who Is Ernest Moniz, Obama's Choice for Energy Secretary?

President Obama on Monday nominated MIT professor Ernest Moniz to become the next Energy secretary, succeeding Steven Chu. Here's what you need to know about him.
yucca mountain

Yucca Mountain Casts a Long Shadow Over Nuclear-Waste Bill Introduced in the Senate

The legislation is silent on whether a proposed agency to manage nuclear waste might consider the nixed Nevada site as a future option.
Thomas Perez

Perez in 3 Charts: Labor Nominee's Key Challenge and Role in Obama Cabinet

If Thomas Perez is confirmed as Labor secretary, he’ll bring to two the number of people of color in President Obama’s Cabinet. But his real challenge will be the national employment rate.
Dave McCarthy

David McCarthy, Majority Chief Counsel, Environment and Economy Subcommittee

David McCarthy is chief counsel for the majority on the Energy and Commerce Environment and Economy Subcommittee.
Dave Camp and John Boehner

Debt-Ceiling Fight May Flare This Week

House Republicans will push action on a bill signaling no retreat from their demand for spending cuts as a condition to any ceiling hike.
Arne Duncan

High School Graduation Rates Improve, but Most Dropouts Are Minorities

The good news is American kids are graduating from high school at a rate better than any time since 1976; the bad news is about 20 percent still drop out, most of whom are minorities.
Chuck Hagel

At Defense, Hagel Will Face a Tough Task on Day 1: Handling Massive Spending Cuts

Chuck Hagel was confirmed as secretary of Defense on Tuesday, with deep cuts to the Pentagon’s budget set to hit three days later.
418Keystone-protest_AP

Keystone XL Pipeline Channels Partisan Attacks

Congressional Republicans see the Keystone XL pipeline as the perfect lightning rod through which to channel attacks on President Obama’s energy policy.
Natural gas well

How Much Natural Gas Should the U.S. Export?

The Energy and Commerce Committee’s leaders and aides are unsure how to tackle one of the biggest debates in the energy space right now: natural-gas exports.

Meet the Folks on the Short List to Replace Energy Secretary Steven Chu

Several people close to the Obama administration have said that Energy Secretary Steven Chu plans to step down from his job. Bloomberg reported this week that his departure could be announced as early as this week. Here are the candidates on the short list to replace him:
Drone

What’s in the Secret Drone Memos

Sources say the Obama administration won’t release them because of classified agreements with foreign governments.
Job seekers

Sequester Slashes Help for Long-Term Unemployed

The across-the-board cuts are about to reduce the payout of federal emergency unemployment checks by as much as 10.7 percent.
Grassley

Immigration-Reform Opponents Lack Strategy

In the week since the “Gang of Eight” released its 844-page immigration bill, there have been three days of hearings featuring 26 witnesses. The compressed time frame has left opponents of the bill little time to read it, let alone formulate a strategy to alter the measure to their liking or kill it entirely.
Joe Biden

Play of the Day: Joe Biden Can't Wait for Easter

Fast forward to 3:10 to see why Joe Biden is excited about Easter.
Obama Boston Marathon Bombing Briefing Photo

Who Is Lisa Monaco, the White House's Counterterrorism Adviser?

President Obama's homeland-security point person deals with the Boston Marathon bombings in her first weeks on the job.
Josh Sheinkman

Five Staff Positions to Watch During Senate Confirmation Hearings on Energy Nominees

Here are some key staffers involved in the vetting of Obama's nominees for his second-term energy and environment team.
John Kerry Speech

John Kerry Differs in Style, Not Substance, From Hillary Clinton

Kerry living it up in Cartagena, as Hillary Rodham Clinton once famously did, is hard to picture. But their policies might not be so different.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev

Was the Ball Dropped in the Tsarnaev Questioning?

To paraphrase Boston Red Sox slugger David Ortiz: This is our @#$&%! Constitution.
Marco Rubio

How Republicans Can Win Over Their Party on Immigration

It’s a combination of charm and fear tactics. Republican defenders of an immigration overhaul are talking up their ability to write into law a tough enforcement strategy.
Steve Scalise

For House Republicans, It’s Fiscal First

If the fiscal fights that defined the opening act of the 113th Congress were supposed to suddenly take a backseat to other issues, someone forgot to tell House Republicans.
Rand Paul

Why Rand Paul's Case Against the White House Matters

The Kentucky Republican's filibuster reflects the pace of politics and the power of social media.
Beowulf

The Blog Commenter Who Invented the Trillion-Dollar Coin

No, the idea didn't come from an economist. It came from a lawyer in Georgia.
Lamar Smith

Meet the Yahoo Caucus

Congress is filled with informal caucuses, from the Black Caucus to the Wine Caucus. I have a new one to propose, which might be among the largest: the Yahoo Caucus.
shh quiet

Will Businesses Be Forced to Say If They've Been Hacked?

The idea is still a long way from reality, but Congress has taken the first step toward requiring companies to admit when they've been hacked.
McDonald's Is Hiring in Chesterland, Ohio

Is the Minimum Wage a Job Crusher or a Job Creator?

President Obama wants to hike the minimum wage, but wading into the economic debate is enough to make your head spin.
Fewer Students Report Taking Remedial Courses, Minority Numbers Still Worrisome

Fewer Students Report Taking Remedial Courses; Minority Numbers Still Worrisome

Despite taxpayers shouldering the cost of remedial courses at public universities, many students required to take such prep courses often leave school without a diploma.

On the Move: March 23, 2013

Kelly Nallen is American Crossroads' new director of digital. Former Hillary Clinton collaborator Kris Balderston is a senior partner at Fleishman-Hillard. Onetime DeLay policy director Juliane Sullivan heads the House Education and the Workforce staff.
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA)

After Boston Marathon Bombings, What Next For Immigration Reform?

“We screwed up. We can’t afford to screw up again,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said on Friday. 
Gay Marriage Protest

Gay Rights Groups Want Action, And They Expect Obama to Deliver

Gay-rights advocates have a long list of asks for the White House, and they expect Obama to deliver.  

Are Arctic Oil-Drilling Challenges Too Great?

Should the United States think twice before allowing oil and gas drilling in the Arctic Ocean? In response to Shell's drilling rig running aground in a storm there earlier this month, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced an internal 60-day review of the department's plans to allow drilling in t...
Gregory Jaczko

Reid Appoints Besieged Regulator to Nuclear-Weapons Panel

Late in the evening on Wednesday, one of the busiest and most unnerving times Washington has seen in a long while, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid quietly appointed Gregory Jaczko, a controversial former nuclear-energy regulator to a key but obscure panel.
Geithner

Obama Treasury Secretary Pick To Await Fiscal Cliff Resolution

As the countdown to the fiscal cliff at the end of the year dominates the attention of the White House and lawmakers, President Obama is unlikely to make any announcement about his choice to replace departing Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner until a resolution is reached to the cliff standoff.
Obama During 2011 Debt Fight

It's Debt-Ceiling Madness Again. Why You Should Stay Calm (Sort Of)

Fighting over the debt ceiling? Been there, done that, got the T-shirt.
Moniz_confirmation

Natural-Gas Exports Dominate Moniz Confirmation Hearing

Tuesday’s confirmation hearing for President Obama’s nominee to be Energy secretary, Ernest Moniz, was dominated by the energy industry’s topic du jour: natural-gas exports.
scott rigell

Republican Congressman Faces Tea Party Wrath for Flying Air Force One

Scott Rigell's desire to compromise on sequester makes him an outlier within the GOP.
100113_agriculture_496w.jpg

Long List of Lobbies Oppose Renewable-Fuels Standard

It’s hard to rival the diversity and sheer number of groups and companies with a vested interest in the renewable-fuels standard, from food and livestock businesses to those in the environmental and energy sectors.
Moniz

New Era for Energy Department Expected Under a Secretary Moniz

With stimulus funding for clean energy at an end, climate-change policy dead in Congress, and harsh budget cuts looming over all agencies thanks to the sequestration, the days of President Obama’s vision of the Energy Department as a green juggernaut have probably come to an end.

Tension on School Closings

Give credit to Education Secretary Arne Duncan for showing up at a hearing last week where hundreds of irate students and parents complained that the department's position on closing schools has resulted in harm for low-income students of color.
Cover 315

VIDEO: Inside This Week's Cover Story

In this week's National Journal cover story, Michael Hirsh discusses how the United States could contain Islamism in the Middle East. In this video, go inside the story with the author himself.

How Can Luddite Adults Help Digital-Savvy Teens?

I am one step ahead of my 10-year-old son on my iPhone skills, but that's only because I know my iTunes password and he doesn't. He can text faster on the cheap cell phone I bought him than he can type on the cheap laptop I bought him. How am I going to keep up when he starts using those tools to keep up with his friends? And how will I handle the kids who think he's weird?
Obama Cabinet

President Obama's Cabinet Turnover Is Just About Average

Despite some high-profile departures, the administration's turnover is nothing surprising. Heck, only one secretary lasted eight years with George W. Bush.

What Does the Keystone XL Pipeline Represent?

What does the controversial Keystone XL pipeline stand for? And what is at stake when President Obama decides its fate?
Wall Steet

4 Takeaways From a Week of Mixed Economic Data

Three numbers will get the most attention here in the Beltway: Jobs, growth and confidence. The latter two delivered a resounding 'meh' this week. It was a reminder to Washington that the fledgling recovery is far from out of the woods. 
American dream

The American Dream, Downsized

The middle class now worries more about holding on for dear life than about climbing the ladder to riches. 
Oil Can

Obama’s Betting on Chuck Hagel, Unlike With Susan Rice

The president is fighting for the war hero and former senator in a way he didn’t for his first pick for secretary of State.
Keystone Pipeline

How the Keystone XL Pipeline Could Predict the Next Senate

His positioning on the Keystone pipeline suggests he's not so attuned to 2014 politics.
Cheney

Dick Cheney at War With His Documentary Filmmakers

Former vice president is angry that a new movie portrays him as manipulative operator--even though he cooperated with the project.
Flight Delay

Where Automatic Spending Cuts May Hit Hardest

Here are some of the programs that would be pared as part of the sequester, according to a report by the White House Office of Management and Budget and letters from administration officials
John Kerry

John Kerry Departure Leads to Racial Milestone in the Senate

For the first time, the Senate will have two African-American members.
Oil refineries

What If Oil Lasts Forever?

New technology and a little-known energy source suggest that fossil fuels may not be finite. This would be a miracle—and a nightmare.

Poll: Which Senate Incumbents Are Most Vulnerable?

Democratic Insiders say it's Mark Pryor or Kay Hagan, while Republicans point to Hagan by a wide margin.
Mike Rogers

No Shortage of Headlines for House Intelligence Chair

The Michigan Republican must toe a fine line between his role as a representative and communicator for the public and his advisory role on sensitive national-security issues.
Fred Upton

House Energy Committee’s Redux Agenda

It’s a new Congress, but it’s hard to tell by looking at the agenda of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
first days iraq

A Decade of War: What the U.S. Military Learned

The 10-year anniversary of the Iraq war has rightfully prompted extended soul-searching about a conflict that cost the nation dearly in blood, treasure, and international prestige. 

Immigration Reform Ramping Up This Week

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM RAMPING UP THIS WEEK. Concerted immigration reform efforts begin this week, with President Obama unveiling a proposal and a bipartisan group of lawmakers agreeing on a set of principles...
Denis McDonough

A Guide to Obama's Staff Reshuffling

President Obama will tap Denis McDonough, a trusted longtime aide steeped in foreign policy and Capitol Hill experience, as his new chief of staff. Obama will announce the decision on Friday at 12:10 p.m. along with several other White House staff changes. The reshuffling is in keeping with Obama's management style of relying heavily on a tight inner circle of aides in his decision-making. Here is a look at the changes.

U.S. Hits Borrowing Limit

The federal government reached its borrowing limit on Monday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner wrote in a letter to congressional leaders.

Five Staffers to Watch in the DCCC and NRCC

The battle for the House majority will rage across the country next year. And few groups will wield more influence on those races than the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee. Here are five staffers from each who will play a critical role in those campaigns.
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.
POTD320

Play of the Day: Biden Takes Over the Vatican

Fast forward to 3:35 to see Leno laud the Senate barber shop’s fiscal fortunes.
Line at Job Fair

Jobs Market Is Improving, But the Long-Term Unemployed Still Can't Catch a Break

The good news? The nation is adding jobs. The bad news? Those who have been out of work the longest still can't seem to get them.
Arkansas Oil Spill

Arkansas' Oil Spill Stirs Opposition to the Keystone Pipeline

The spill, outside Little Rock, Ark., serves as a stark reminder that energy production comes with unavoidable risks.
Jacob Lew, left, and  Herman Van Rompuy

Obama's Mixed Message on Austerity

His Treasury secretary lectures Europe on the perils of thriftiness while his own budget agenda is driven by cuts. 

Poll: Is It Politically Advantageous for Obama to Cut Medicare and Social Security?

Insiders from both parties say it is, though more Democrats are skeptical. 
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