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Kevin MaCarthy

The GOP Energy Tent Is Slowly Getting Bigger

House members like Rep. Kevin McCarthy are still avid fossil-fuel proponents, but they’ve begun to advocate for renewables, too. 
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.
Location, Location, Location

The One Map That Explains Louisville's Economy

Is this Kentucky city the center of the universe? Not quite, but it's close enough. 
air traffic time lapse

Can Cell Phone Metadata Hurt Your Privacy and Save America?

When Stone Librande took breaks from playtesting the new SimCity, he noticed something mesmerizing. Pausing from the construction frenzy that defines the rest of the game, SimCity’s lead designer discovered that his citizens’ schedules often created beautiful, shifting patterns of motion.

Inside the Cover: The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

In this week's National Journal cover story, Coral Davenport explores the Republican party's relationship with climate change. In this video, get inside the story with the author herself.
Chris Christie

The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

Science, storms, and demographics are starting to change minds among the rank and file. 
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.
Senator Harry Reid

Senate Faces Test on Small-Ball Energy Bills

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., will soon have at his feet a small handful of bipartisan energy bills primed for passage, but whether he overcomes the politics that have felled similar efforts in past years is a lingering question.
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.
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.
Sky

Why Carbon Is So Hard to Regulate

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

Pat Toomey’s Tilt Toward Middle Angers Conservative Base

The junior senator from Pennsylvania’s doomed effort to broker a gun-control compromise on background checks provoked anger among fellow Republicans, who called him an enemy of the Second Amendment and a traitor to the conservative cause.
Fracking

Why the U.S. Should Give Its Fracking Technology to China

But don’t count on much popular support for U.S. help.
Goodlatte

Immigration Debate May Grow More Complicated

With Congress focused on immigration reform this week, the national security aspects of the issue are moving to the forefront amid efforts by some conservatives to inject the Boston Marathon bombing suspects into that debate.
 Lake Borgne Barrier

Let’s Not Talk About Climate Change

Louisiana’s two senators worry more about oil than the rising water level.
Karen Lightfoot

Karen Lightfoot, Minority Communications Director

After 25 years on Capitol Hill, Karen Lightfoot has a wealth of experience communicating complicated policy issues. Indeed, her experience began before she even got to college.
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.
Greg Dotson

Greg Dotson, Minority Staff Director, Energy and Environment Subcommittee

After wrapping up a three-week sea-kayaking trip in Mexico in 1996, Greg Dotson got a call about working for Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif. He flew to Washington, bought a suit when he landed, and soon had a job.
Ethanol

Renewable-Fuels Standard Gets Bipartisan Attention

For the first time since President Obama won the White House in 2008, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., and ranking member Henry Waxman, D-Calif., are working together on a controversial energy policy: the renewable-fuels standard.
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.
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.
Lisa Jackson

Waiting for a Clash on Climate Change

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

Utilities, Enviros Tracking New Rules

The Environmental Protection Agency has embarked on a historic undertaking: writing a sweeping set of regulations aimed at slowing global warming by dramatically cutting pollution from the nation’s fleet of coal-fired power plants.
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.
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.
John Dingell

The Art and Agony of Oversight

What many consider to be the golden age of congressional oversight can be summed up by a word coined but no longer heard much on Capitol Hill: “Dingell-gram.”

Bad News: There’s Less Being Spent on Green Energy. Good News: There’s More Green Energy

It’ll come as no surprise that global investment in clean energy fell last year. Quarterly numbers had foreshadowed that investors and governments were retreating from big green bets. But here’s the twist: Though investment dropped  11%, to $269 billion in 2012, renewable energy installations grew by a record 88,000 megawatts (MW), according to a report released today by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
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.
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.
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.
iPhone

Could Your Smartphone Lower Your Electricity Bill?

Smart-grid technology aims to prevent blackouts, cut costs, and maybe even change the way you use energy.
Politically Incorrect

The Politically Incorrect Caucus: 6 Controversy-Prone House Members

Rep. Don Young's ethnically charged reference to Hispanic ranch workers as "wetbacks" on an Alaska radio program reminded us of other controversial members of the 113th Congress.
Waxman Upton

Ethanol Debate Has Glimpse of Bipartisanship

The top Republican and Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee are finally on the same page about a controversial energy policy after reading from two completely different playbooks the last four years.
Lisa Murkowski and Ron Wyden

Five Easy Pieces of Energy Legislation

There are hopeful signs that years of gridlock could be replaced by action on some small-scale bills.
Keystone Pipeline

Approving the Keystone Pipeline Won't Bring Obama Bipartisan Goodwill

If President Obama wants to approve the Keystone XL pipeline as a way of extending an olive branch to congressional Republicans, they are likely to see it as one riddled with thorns.
Obama electric car

Can Obama's Energy Trust Fund Idea Gain Traction in Congress?

With gasoline prices and global temperatures rising, Obama will ask Congress to take action on an idea he first proposed last month in his State of the Union address: the creation of an energy trust fund that would research alternative-technology vehicles. 
Barack Obama

The Great Party Paradox

A year of surveys shows that Americans don't line up consistently behind Republicans or Democrats -- but like a little of each.
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.
Ashley Judd

Ashley Judd Is a 30-Second Ad Waiting to Happen

A Judd-McConnell Senate match would be catnip for the media and raw meat for the GOP. Democrats might have less fun.  
Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant

Climate Change: Even Worse Than We Feared

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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.
China's smog problem

How Dirty, Polluted China Takes Climate Change More Seriously Than We Do

People may not be able to breathe in Beijing, but its politicians are doing more than U.S. lawmakers are to slow global warming.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid tours a Nevada solar plant in 2010.

Harry Reid: The Closet Environmentalist

He doesn’t tout it, but the Senate majority leader is one of the greenest members of Congress.
Castro Brothers

Rep. Castro Denounces Congress, Implored Obama to Lead

Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro and his twin brother Julian, the mayor of San Antonio, express concern that sequestration hurts the U.S. economy and jeopardize thousands of military jobs.
Castro Brothers

Rising Democratic Star Joaquin Castro Says Obama 'Needs to Be a Leader' on the Budget

Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas denounces GOP but says the president also bears responsibility for sequestration fiasco.
Obama Cabinet Meeting

The 6 Species of Secretaries That Will Define Obama's Term

The president has made most of his top administration picks. Here's how they all fit into his second term.
Gina McCarthy

Republicans Take Aim at Obama’s EPA Nominee

President Obama’s nomination Monday of Gina McCarthy to lead the Environmental Protection Agency sets up the next high-profile clash between the White House and congressional Republicans over the incendiary issue of climate change.
Gina McCarthy

Gina McCarthy, Obama's 'Green Quarterback,' Has a History of Working With Industry

Gina McCarthy, President Obama’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, has been called the president's "green quarterback." But she also has a reputation as a political pragmatist who works well with industry and listens to concerns. If confirmed she will become the face of Obama’s sweeping ambitions to tackle climate change as a legacy issue and will write rules to force the coal industry to change its ways. 
Sandy Potomac river flooding

Can Climate-Change Denier Ken Cuccinelli Win a Swing State?

In storm-battered Virginia, the Republican candidate for governor still doubts the science.
dolphin-pollution

EPA Funding Reductions Have Kneecapped Environmental Enforcement

Budget cuts have greatly diminished the EPA's ability to enforce environmental laws.
Chip Roy

Five Staff Positions to Watch: Chiefs of Staff for Freshman Senators

Meet the chiefs of staff for five of the Senate's newest members.
Obama Talks Sequester

The 4 Most Politically Sensitive Budget Cuts

President Obama and congressional Republicans have been trading blame for the failure to avoid automatic budget cuts known as sequestration, but ultimately both sides could see some blowback from the public once the reductions start to take effect.  Here are four areas where cuts are the most politically sensitive.

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?
Superstorm Sandy House

Obama Administration Reaches Out to Local Governments to Spread Its Climate Message

President Obama used his Inaugural Address and State of the Union speech to issue the boldest, clearest call to action on climate change ever voiced by a sitting U.S. president—but don’t expect him to barnstorm across the country with that message.
Nuclear Power Plant

Nuclear Waste in the Age of Climate Change

Concerns about global warming are giving a boost nuclear power. And that's bringing new focus—and a possible solution—to the problem of radioactive waste.
Obama on Sequester

What Unites Obama's Coalition — and What Could Divide It

One conclusion that jumps from the Pew Research Center/USA Today national survey released Thursday is that the coalition that reelected President Obama last fall remains in step behind him — and is largely unified behind the key elements of his increasingly aggressive second-term agenda. But the poll also suggests that failure to generate more-rapid economic recovery could nonetheless strain the powerful coalition Obama has assembled.
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.
Keystone Pipeline

Are Environmentalists Getting It Wrong on the Keystone XL Pipeline?

Focusing on how it would contribute to emissions overshadows the large risk of spills -- and diverts attention from more effective ways to cut down on carbon.
Obama SOTU

Why Obama Went Big on Climate Change

President Barack Obama pushed Congress passionately for gun control. He urged reason in the search for a bipartisan fiscal agreement. But on climate change, he delivered an express threat—either Congress would take action to reduce emissions, or he would do so by fiat.
anti-nuclear power rally

Why Japan Can't Quit Nuclear Power

Since the Fukushima meltdown, the country has tried to reduce its reliance on nuclear reactors. But with nearly a third of its energy needs powered by the atom, change is difficult.
President Obama at Bowling Green State University

Courting the Twenty-Somethings

In many ways, the president steered his party toward issues that matter to that growing generation.
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...
Lindsey Graham

Lindsey Graham Allies Will Form Super PAC

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., will have a friendly super PAC on his side during his 2014 reelection campaign. Graham allies will soon form a super PAC called the "West Main Street Values Fund," former South Carolina Republican Party chairman Katon Dawson said Wednesday. "You'll be hearing more abou...
Obama SOTU

Grading Obama: High Marks for Style but Low Ones on Civil Liberties

The president's "College Scorecard" inspires "Obama Scorecard" and so-so State of the Union scores.
John Kerry applauds Obama at State of the Union

Obama Cites Storms, Drought to Build Case For Climate Action

Fifteen years ago, when President Clinton raised the specter of climate change in his State of the Union address, he spoke of a “gathering crisis” that would need to be stopped “at some point in the next century.” Now scientists say that crisis is starting to arrive – and President Obama has noticeably shifted his rhetoric, describing an urgent problem that’s here now, already harming American people.
SOTU

The Most Important Policies In President Obama's 2013 State of the Union Address

Everything you need to know from 2013's State of the Union address, from health care and the budget to immigration and guns.
Obama Gives the 2013 State of the Union

Cliffs Notes on Obama's 2013 State of the Union Address

The first State of the Union address since President Obama's second inauguration focused overwhelmingly on domestic policy. He devoted roughly one paragraph each to Afghanistan, North Korea--which reportedly tested a nuclear weapon on Monday--and Iran. For comparison's sake, that's the roughly the same amount of time he spent on cybersecurity in the address.
Obama at State of the Union

Nothing Big or Bold About Obama's State of the Union Address

For all his swagger and political capital, the president subtly acknowledged the limits of what he can accomplish--even while promising in his State of the Union address to create “a rising, thriving middle class.”
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.

Sizing Up Obama's State of the Union Address

Sizing Up Obama's State of the Union Address   In his State of the Union address, President Obama challenged Congress to act on climate change  - but declared that if lawmakers don't act, he will.   He did not detail how, specifically, he'll use his executive authority, but his spee...
Barack Obama

There’s No Such Thing as Political Capital

The idea of political capital—or mandates, or momentum—is so poorly defined that presidents and pundits often get it wrong. With Obama’s State of the Union upon us, it’s time to rethink the term.

Topping Insiders' Priority Lists: Immigration, Jobs, and Deficit Reduction

Plus: Political Insiders speculate on which party will be blamed if the sequester takes effect.
Nemo

The Scary Truth About How Much Climate Change is Costing You

While policymakers fiddle, the threat of economic harm posed by rising sea levels, devastating storms, and drought is growing every day.

Video: Inside This Week's Cover Story

In this week's cover story, National Journal's Coral Davenport discusses the economic impacts of climate change.
Lisa Murkowski

In Washington, Energy and Climate Issues Get Shoved in the Closet

Policy in these areas is taking a back seat to just about everything else on Capitol Hill these days.
Oil Rig

Breakthrough Nears on Tapping Offshore Energy Supply

In a season of political gridlock, a breakthrough could be near on legislation to promote energy production off the nation’s coastlines.
Yes We Can Obama Rally Grant Park

With New Support Base, Obama Doesn't Need Right-Leaning Whites Anymore

For decades, Democrats shaped their policies around fears of the culturally conservative white voters to the GOP. But Obama’s winning coalition has altered that calculus.
Barack Obama

Why Obama Is Giving Up on Right-Leaning Whites

For decades, Democrats shaped their policies around fears of losing right-leaning white voters to the GOP. But Obama’s winning coalition has altered that calculus.

Insiders: Immigration Reform Likely to Pass Congress

They’re divided over what the Republican Party needs to do to improve its standing. 

Report: N.H. 'Push-Poll' Case Nears Hearing

A lawsuit filed by the New Hampshire state attorney general's office against former Republican Rep. Charlie Bass continues to loom over the campaign polling industry at large. The suit, which is set to be heard in a Concord, N.H., courthouse next month according to a story published Thursday by the...
Todd Akin

The GOP's Latest Challenge: Stopping the Next Todd Akin

A slew of gaffe-prone Republican candidates are already emerging to run for the Senate, and could cost the party their shot at a majority again. What can the GOP do?

How Should Washington Address Climate Change?

How, if at all, should President Obama and Congress address climate change?

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%
Empty Office

Frustrated Aides Leaving Capitol Hill

Fed up with gridlock, legislative staffers who specialize in energy and environment are fleeing.
Mary Jo White

After Taking on Terrorists, Can Mary Jo White Handle Tycoons?

As U.S. attorney, she took down John Gotti and the “blind sheikh.” As head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, she would be hunting a different kind of game.
John Kerry

John Kerry, Diplomat in Waiting, Waits No More

Over nearly three decades in the Senate and especially during the past four years of the Obama administration, John Kerry has often played the role of the calm diplomat and the closer in negotiations. Now, Kerry is hoping to use that experience as the next secretary of State.
Barack Obama, Harry Reid

Obama: A Party of One

President Obama's second-term achievements depend on whether his voters were drawn more to his personality or his policy proposals.
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.

How Obama Can Tackle Climate Change Without Congress

President Obama’s Inaugural Address was his boldest, clearest signal to date that he intends to take on the challenge of fighting climate change as a signature achievement of his presidency. 
Obama and Boehner

Is Obama Trying to Destroy the GOP?

The president pokes at the GOP and asks citizens to put the pressure on. Is he trying to destroy the opposition party?
Inauguration Photos from the Capitol

What Obama Wants and What Congress Will Give Him

How the president's vision fits with what Congress is likely to do.

Full Text of President Barack Obama's Second Inaugural Address

President Obama's speech given on January 21, 2013, at the U.S. Capitol.
Steven Chu

The Education of Steven Chu

The Nobel physicist was brought in to transform the energy economy, but faced political battles.
Obama

From Guns to Immigration, Obama Circumventing GOP

New White House strategy reflects the President's inability to work with House Republicans
John Boehner Sandy

Poll: Country Divided Over Debt Ceiling, Deficit Reduction

Surveys showed that Americans sided with President Obama and Democrats in last month’s debate over extending the Bush tax cuts for most taxpayers, but according to a new United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll, the country is more divided over how to reduce the deficit as the White House and Congress fight over the debt ceiling and sequestration.
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.”
Denis McDonough

What Obama's Chief of Staff Pick Will Say About His Management Style

Denis McDonough, who has the inside track to succeed Jacob Lew as White House chief of staff, has years of experience on Capitol Hill and is part of an inner circle of trusted aides who have worked with President Obama since his 2008 campaign.
Trucking pollution

Obama Faces Dilemma on 'Mother of All’ Climate-Change Regulations

How President Obama could clean up carbon emissions—alone.
Obama Issues

State of the Union Stakes: Guns, Debt, and Climate Change Give Obama Shot at Immortality

The only thing Obama could do worse than failing on the big issues is failing to try on a big way.
Gale Norton on a horse

Can You Lead on the Environment if You Bypass Climate Change?

A conservative group has ideas for stewardship, but global warming is not part of its mission.
Sun on the capitol dome

Five Sleeper Issues Washington Could Face in 2013

The incoming Congress has big challenges ahead. But don’t be distracted by the bright shiny objects that are tax reform, entitlement reform, and maybe even gun control. There are some important issues for the U.S. economy and U.S. industries that could pop to the top of the agenda in 2013 and have widespread implications for Washington and the country.
Schwarzenegger

Arnold Schwarzenegger: Terminator, Body-Builder, and Global Leader on Climate-Change

If the United States ever enacts a major climate-change law, it will owe a debt to Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Sun on the capitol dome

The Bright Side of Falling Off the Fiscal Cliff

As 2012 sputters to a close, it wraps up with a yawning gap between widespread economic pessimism and the actual state of economic affairs.

Who Will Succeed Jackson as EPA Head?

After four years in office, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson said on Thursday that she will be stepping down after President Obama’s State of the Union address in January, inviting speculation about who will be named as her successor.

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.
Chuck Hagel Nomination Hearing

Chuck Hagel's Real Problem May Be Climate Change

Forget about Israel. Hagel made his name opposing a global warming accord.
Hagel

With Hagel At Defense, What a Senate 'Team of Mentors' Might Mean for Obama's 2nd Term

In the summer of 2008, while the two of them were on a trip to Afghanistan, then-Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., gave a bit of advice to then-presidential candidate Barack Obama. "I told Obama he should pick [Joe] Biden as his running mate," Hagel recalled in a 2010 interview. "I said, 'He understands governance better than anyone else. In particular he understands Congress. He understands how it fits together like no one else you could get. He's got the political piece. He 's got the policy piece. There's nobody in his league.'"
Interstate 5 in California

California's New Cap-and-Trade Law: A Model for the Country?

On Jan. 1, California will start enforcing a robust cap-and-trade law that’s the first of its kind in the United States. Its success will influence whether other states—and the federal government—follow suit.
liquefied natural gas

Manufacturers Troubled by Prospect of Exporting More Natural Gas

The administration appears poised to allow increased gas sales overseas. It will expand America’s influence, but it carries economic risk. 

Whither Global Climate-Change Talks?

Should international negotiators abandon the top-down multilateral system to confront climate change and find another way? The 18th installment of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is now in its second and final week in Doha, Qatar, the country with--ironically--the world'...

Is Washington Ready For a Carbon Tax?

Should President Obama and Congress pursue a carbon tax?
Jack Lew and Barack Obama

Jack Lew: The Man Who Could Save Obama's Legacy

Lew’s power has grown over less than a year as President Obama’s chief of staff—and he already has Republicans dreading a budget confrontation with him during the lame-duck session of Congress.
Allison Macfarlane

Academic in Line For NRC Post Under Scrutiny

Allison Macfarlane, the college professor tapped to lead the federal agency that oversees the nation’s nuclear power industry, is seen by most observers and colleagues as an intelligent and amiable choice, but many are unsure if she is ready to take the helm of a ship that has been listing for months.
Joe Biden

Hot Ticket

Foodies—brace yourselves. On Tuesday, the annual Embassy Chef Challenge brings together cuisines from around the world into one hunger-satisfying tasting sure to make your stomach happy.
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