NJ Topics Deficit And Debt

Chet Susslin
National Journal Coverage
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.
National debt clock

How Much Does Debt-Limit Brinksmanship Cost? Last Time, More Than $1B

Here’s how the last debt-ceiling saga played out.
Denis McDonough

Top White House Aides Informed of IRS Troubles, but Didn't Tell Obama

Top White House aides, including chief of staff Denis McDonough, were informed of the forthcoming report on the IRS' targeting of tea party group but decided not to inform President Obama in advance, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Monday.
Dan Pfeiffer

Is The White House Obscuring the Truth?

White House spokesman adds more confusion to the administration's response to IRS scandal, Benghazi response on Sunday shows.
S&P Headquarters

S&P Warns Congress of Risks of Political Brinkmanship on Debt

The group's top analyst for the U.S. government's credit rating says making big fiscal decisions in a crisis setting raises chances of another downgrade.
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.
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. 
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., on April 17, 2013

Good News for Doctors and Budget Hawks

The price tag for repealing a flawed Medicare doctors' pay formula will remain near a recent record low, according to a new estimate from the independent Congressional Budget Office released on Tuesday. It’s good news for the physicians and lawmakers who hope to see a permanent “doc fix” in 2013, and suggests the momentum behind achieving repeal is likely to continue this year.
 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.
Peter Wehner, Yuval Levin, and James Capretta

Some Republicans Don’t Believe Austerity Is Enough

Strategists and wonks are urging House leaders to refocus their economic message on ideas that the middle class actually care about. 
Barack Obama and Bob Corker

Why Obama Can Ignore the House of Representatives

By courting senators and shaping public opinion, the president thinks he can pressure lower-chamber Republicans to accept bipartisan compromises. 
Denis McDonough

The Quiet Charm Offensive of Obama Chief of Staff Denis McDonough

For an administration that has had a hard time creating and maintaining relationships on Capitol Hill, President Obama's new chief of staff, Denis McDonough, has emerged as a bridge builder early in the administration’s second term.
Obama

The Myth of Presidential Leadership

It is past time to abandon selective history and wishful thinking, and realize the inherent limits of presidential power.
Obama in Austin

The Myth of Presidential Leadership

It is past time to abandon selective history and wishful thinking, and realize the inherent limits of presidential power.
Ryan Budget

The Budget Debate in 6 Simple Graphics

There are hundreds of ways to slice up the budget, but some of the simplest come from the Congressional Budget Office.
Jeff Sessions

Heritage Foundation Warns of Steep Costs of Immigration Reform

The Heritage Foundation released a study Monday saying that legalizing the current population of illegal immigrants could cost $6.3 trillion in entitlements and social programs in the long run. But the report came as no surprise, given that the conservative think tank issued a similar warning in 2007, and it’s unlikely to substantially change the fate of immigration reform in the Senate.
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.
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.
Airliner

A Playbook for Undoing the Sequester

When Congress voted last week to give the FAA more flexibility with its cuts, it set off a race among other special interests to push for exemptions. 
Aerospace

Five Cool Innovations to Lift Workers Into the Middle Class

From rent-subsidized apartments for single moms to an online medical clinic that saves $88 per diagnosis, American ingenuity works. 
Michigan jobs

Being In the Middle Class Means Worrying About Falling Behind

After years of economic turmoil, most families now believe the most valuable—and elusive—possession in American life is economic security.
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.
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.
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.
Harry Reid

Reid Set to Push for Conference on Budget

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, is expected to ask the Senate for consent to move to a conference on the budget, according to a Democratic aide. 
Obama

Routes to a Budget Deal Appear Stalled

The two routes to an agreement—regular order or schmoozing—do not seem to be working, despite Washington's deep dive into fiscal issues.
Mike Bloomquist

Mike Bloomquist, Majority General Counsel

Lobbying may earn more money, but Mike Bloomquist is drawn to other things Capitol Hill has to offer. And as general counsel to the Energy and Commerce Committee—which has jurisdiction over everything from health and energy policy to amusement-park safety—there’s a lot.
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.
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.
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. 
White House FY2014 Budget

Obama's Budget Garners Anger From All Sides

Roughly 24 hours after the White House released its budget, liberal Democrats were furious about its so-called chained CPI provision, which would change the cost-of-living calculation for federal benefits like Social Security. Meanwhile, Republicans were criticizing President Obama's fiscal 2014 blueprint for not going far enough on its tweaks to Medicare and other cuts.
Rep. Greg Walden R.-Ore.

Changing Sides on Medicare and Social Security Is a Time-Honored Tactic

That's especially true for Republicans, and for Greg Walden in particular.
GPO budget release

The Hottest Book Drop in Town: Behind the Scenes at Today's Budget Release

Here's one intern right of passage: Collect 90-lbs of fiscal outlines for the bosses.
Rand Paul

Why Rand Paul Was Right to Reach Out to Black Voters

It's political malpractice for the GOP to ignore the constituency that is critical to its long-term success.
Budget

The Real Budget Action Won't Come Until Tonight's Dinner With the GOP

Contrary to popular belief, the real budget action on Wednesday won’t begin until the early evening, when 12 Republican senators are scheduled to arrive at the White House for a private dinner with the president.
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.
Budget

Beware Obama's Budget Predictions: Many Forecasts Are Wrong

CBO forecasts are bound by current law, not future policies, while White House forecasts reflect a president's hopes. Both have been wildly amiss.
Sen. Murray

Sen. Murray Keeps Hanford Nuclear Site Safe From Budget Cuts

She may not attend Tuesday’s confirmation hearing for Ernest Moniz, President Obama’s nominee for Energy secretary, but you can bet Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., will make sure the department has all the money it needs to keep the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in her home state running safely.
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.
Obama - Boehner

Obama's Gambit Raises Pressure on Boehner, Edges Washington Toward Budget Deal

The president's budget will test whether the GOP's antitax rhetoric is bluster or a deal-killing fact.
Belogolova family

Why Washington and Moscow Still Don't Trust Each Other

I left the USSR in 1991. Going back showed that Cold War stereotypes don’t fade—even with time.
John Boehner

House Republicans Map Out Strategy for Debt-Ceiling Battle

When the House Republicans return from recess next week, one of their top priorities will be charting out the next fiscal battle—the debt ceiling.
Elizabeth Colbert

South Carolina Special Election Will Be High-Profile but Have Little National Significance

There's little reason to believe this off-year fight between Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch and Republican Mark Sanford will carry with it important political lessons.
CBO spending

There’s Nothing to Fear But the Debt Itself

Quick, which segment of federal spending will grow fastest from 2015 through 2021? Did you guess Medicare? If you did, you’d be wrong.
Ashley Judd

Ashley Judd Is Out, but McConnell Still Needs to Worry

The actress announced she won’t be running in 2014 against the Senate minority leader.
SCOTUS Gay Marriage

House GOP Leaders Silent on Marriage Law They're Paying to Defend

Republicans strategists agree with leadership's call to stay mum as the Supreme Court takes up the case, saying it's best not to distract from the party's economic message.
Reflected in a bathroom mirror, Sen. Paul Simon adjusts one of his trademark bow ties as he prepares for an evening out with his wife at their Carbondale, Ill., home in 2001.

The Ghost of Paul Simon Haunts Obama

The late Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill., warned in the '80s and '90s that Democrats would eventually have to cut government in ways they opposed.
Barbara Mikulski

Short-Term Flexibility Won't Help Long-Term Impact of Sequestration

President Obama signed legislation on Tuesday to keep the government funded through the end of September and to give greater flexibility to a handful of agencies as they roll out the mandated across-the-board spending cuts known as sequestration.
Paul Ryan budget

What Does It Mean to Be Conservative, Anyway?

Backing the Ryan budget might not be enough to prove your cred.
Blue Angels

Armed With Excuses, Lawmakers Head Home to Sequester Complaints

As lawmakers were preparing to go back home to their districts for a two-week recess, many were already getting an earful of grievances from constituents about the sequester’s impact and were bracing to hear far more in meetings and town halls.

Idaho's Risch Comfortable Ahead of First Reelection Bid

Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, the most conservative member of the Senate in National Journal’s 2012 vote ratings, may not be a household name in much of America, but he is well known in his home state. Risch held a number of offices in state government, from state senator to lieutenant governor to, bri...
Senate Votes

LIVE UPDATES: What's Happening at the Senate Vote-A-Rama

The Senate's hours-long marathon of votes on amendments to the budget has begun. Here's what's worth knowing.
ARRA sign

The One Word You Can't Say in Washington

Democrats agree on the need for stimulus. Just don't call it that.
Harry Reid

Sparks, Politics, and Amendments Will Fly in Vote-a-Rama

Senators will offer a raft of amendments Friday as the chamber debates its first budget in 4 years, taking advantage of the rare chance to force the opposing party into an unlimited number of tough votes.
John Barrow

Meet the New 'Party of No'

After listening to both parties lay out dire policy and political effects of various budget proposals this month, a few dozen House members avoided getting branded with any of the spending documents this week. Thirty-six House members, mostly vulnerable Democrats but with some Republicans sprinkled...
Rep. Chris Gibson, R-N.Y.

Ten House GOPers Vote Against Ryan's Budget

At least five of the 10 House Republicans who voted against the GOP budget proposal Thursday morning are facing electoral pressures, some from the left and some from the right. The bill passed the House, 221-207, with Democrats unanimous in opposition and most Republicans in support. Rep. Chris Gib...
Obama - Boehner

Debunking 2 Myths: GOP Won't Raise Taxes and Budget Deal Is Dead

Republicans are open to tax hikes as part of a narrow path to bargain with the White House.
Reince Priebus

The GOP Disconnect on Economic Policy

The RNC may want to send a few extra copies of the election postmortem to Capitol Hill. Judging by the budget blueprints put forth by congressional Republicans, they didn’t get the memo.

Senate Reaches Deal on Bill to Fund Government Through End of Fiscal Year

Senate Democrats and Republicans have reached a deal on proceeding this afternoon with a bill to fund government through Sept. 30, the remainder of the fiscal year.
Steve Scalise

House GOP Committee's New Budget Plan: Faster, Deeper Cuts

The Republican Study Committee's new plan balances the federal government in just 4 years, whereas Paul Ryan’s balances it in 10.
Austin Smythe

5 Staffers to Watch on the House and Senate Budget Committees

The House and Senate will be wrangling with their respective budgets this week. There’s little expectation that the two chambers’ products will be combined into a joint budget resolution, but they serve as the starting points for broader budget debates between Republicans and Democrats. Here’s a look at the two Budget committees’ top staffers who are critical to this process.
Paul Ryan at CPAC

Previewing the Sunday Shows

This week's Sunday shows will focus on the rival budgets put forth by leaders from both parties. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., will be on Face the Nation, while House Speaker John Boehner will be doing a one-on-one interview with ABC's Martha Raddatz on This Week. The Sunday sh...

House Delegation Plans Journey to Rome for Installation of Pope Francis

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi is going somewhere next week that Speaker John Boehner says he cannot because of congressional work: She will join Vice President Joe Biden to attend the installation of the new Pope in Rome.
Bill Flores, Scott Garrett

Nondefense Slice of Domestic Spending on Track to Hit 50-Year Low

Both the Senate Democratic and House Republican budgets project funding for things like welfare programs and government operations will reach a 50-year low as a share of economic activity.
Paul Ryan at CPAC

Paul Ryan's CPAC Speech: Too Busy to Talk 2016

Mitt Romney's running mate focuses on selling the GOP's budget, not his vision for the party.
Sen. Patty Murray

Patty Murray’s Stature Is Tied to Her Budget’s Fate

Succeeding in what Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., dubbed “mission impossible” could elevate Murray's status as a rising star in Democratic ranks.
Broun

Broun to Potential Ga. Challengers: Stay Where You Are

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. -- Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., has a message for his colleagues in the Peach State's delegation who are considering challenging him for the Republican nomination for Sen. Saxby Chambliss' seat: Don't bother. "I hope everyone in the delegation gets ready to stay where they are becau...
Paul Ryan

There's New Hope for a Grand Bargain

Amid the hot air in Washington comes the whiff of compromise.
Rand Paul

Why John McCain Doesn't Matter Anymore

The GOP is now more open to isolationists and deficit hawks like Rand Paul than to traditional pro-defense Republicans.
New housing developments

How Personal Finance Can Help You Think About the Federal Budget

It may be an imperfect analogy, but that doesn’t mean that household financial planning can’t be a helpful way to understand this week's federal-budget fight.
John Boehner

Citing Budget Debate, Boehner Declines White House Invite to Attend Papal Investiture

House Speaker John Boehner has decided not to accept an invitation from President Obama to join Vice President Joe Biden as part of a delegation to the papal investiture, citing Congress’s budget negotiations as a reason.
Sen. Patty Murray

In New Budget, Senate Democrats Offer Alternative Political Vision

For the first time since 2009, Senate Democrats on Wednesday introduced a budget resolution, which promised to stabilize the debt over the next decade and raise new revenue and cut spending in equal parts.
Obama

GOP Aide: Obama's 'Using Us As Props'

President Obama continued his goodwill tour this week with stops at the Capitol to meet with House and Senate Republicans.
Gay Marriage Protest

How One Gay Conservative Group Landed a Spot at CPAC, Despite Being Uninvited

GOProud will be in the building, but not part of the official conference.
Obama and Paul Ryan

Hypocritical Paul Ryan Plan Doesn't Close Path to Big Budget Deal

Republicans in Congress are open to a second tax hike if Democrats bow much more on spending.
Paul Ryan

No, Budgets Aren't Like Family Finances. But the Analogy Is Telling About the Fiscal Debate.

When Paul Ryan unveiled the Republican budget this week, he leaned on a familiar analogy: the household budget. In pushing the goal of balancing the federal budget within 10 years, the congressman from Wisconsin said families across the country must make sure that they live within their means, and government should do the same. 
Paul Ryan budget

House Republican Budget Offers More of the Same

By unveiling a budget blueprint that would erase the deficit in just 10 years, House Republicans sought on Tuesday to make that goal the gold standard and bare minimum for all future budget battles between the two parties.
Obama at the Capitol

Washington Gets Back to Its Day Job

After years of busting its deadlines, Washington rediscovers what matters with the latest round of budgets.
Federal Reserve Building

Paul Ryan Misses the Mark on Fed Policy in Budget Blueprint

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan mischaracterized the relationship between the Federal Reserve and the Obama administration in his discussion of monetary policy in the budget blueprint he released Tuesday.
Paul Ryan

What Paul Ryan's New Budget Means for Health Care

No Medicare changes for 10 years. Big Medicaid cuts right away. And a kind-of-sort-of Obamacare repeal.
What is debt

Those National Debt Clocks on Congressional Websites Are Wrong

An analysis of 56 debt clocks found 16 different figures.

Lieberman and Kyl to Lead Project on America’s Global Role

Juliane Sullivan, a onetime policy director for ex-House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, will become the new director of the Republican staff for the House Education and the Workforce Committee on Monday.
Paul Ryan

House GOP Confident on Paul Ryan’s Medicare Plan

The House Budget Committee chairman’s plan to balance the federal budget in 10 years would have been, until recently, cause for House Republicans to fret. But emboldened by last year’s elections, the House GOP believes it can adopt his new proposal and avoid backlash at the same time.
Guy Cecil Executive Director of the DSCC

Vulnerable Senate Dems on Their Own on Budget Vote

The executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said Monday that he will not advise vulnerable incumbents how to vote on the Senate Democrats' upcoming budget proposal, saying the politically consequential decisions will be left to individual members. "They'll weigh the pros...
Paul Ryan

Paul Ryan's Obamacare Repeal Fantasy

Even with Obama in the White House until 2017, the Wisconsin Republican's new budget relies on repealing most of the Affordable Care Act.
Federal Budget

In Break With 92-Year Tradition, Congress Will Kick Off Budget Process

It’s budget week on Capitol Hill--the start of an annual ritual, but one that this year bucks a nearly century-old tradition.
Patty Murray

Dueling Budget Plans Help Define Both Parties

By the middle of this week, Americans will once again be plunged into the wildly different world views of Republicans and Democrats as the two parties release competing budget proposals within hours of one another.
Temporary Office

Budget Cuts Keep Freshman Senators in the 'Swing Suites'

The across-the-board cuts to the federal government’s budget are exacerbating an already convoluted process for new senators moving from cramped temporary digs to their permanent offices. 
Gov. Mike Beebe

Why the Republican Plan to Reform Medicare Could Really Make It More Expensive

Republicans like Paul Ryan want more market competition in federal health care programs. Trouble is, those plans don't save money.
Sen. Patty Murray

Why the Senate Democrats' Budget Will Be Vague

The fewer specifics they offer, the less political ammunition there will be for the GOP to use against them.
Maxican Standoff

The Real Budget Battle

In Washington, all financial skirmishes lead to the same place.

Will a Bargain Be Struck to Reverse the Sequestration Cuts?

In Washington, all financial skirmishes lead to the same place.
Obama gives a toast

Obama's Dinner Out With Senators Didn't Solve the Budget Mess, But It Did Ease Tensions

Want the partisan acrimony between Democrats and Republicans to fade? Turns out all you need to do is buy people a fancy meal.
President Barack Obama talks with Rep. Paul Ryan

House Budget Chairman's Track Record on Medicare Belies His Rhetoric

Paul Ryan's plans for current seniors in Medicare are not much different from President Obama's.
U.S tax forms 1040 and W2.

In the Budget Debate, Even the Definition of Spending Is Up for Grabs

If you needed any more indication that lawmakers are going to have a tough time getting the nation’s fiscal house in order, look no further. The parties can't even agree to the terms of the debate.
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.
Mark Toohey

The Math Behind the Automatic Budget Cuts

Under a deal to raise the legal limit on the government's borrowing in August 2011, lawmakers agreed to roughly $1 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade and set up a process to find at least $1.2 trillion in further savings. Under that deal, known as the Budget Control Act, a "supercommittee" was established to try to hammer out an agreement on long-term budget savings. The committee folded in 2011 without an agreement on deficit reduction, setting the stage for automatic cuts to mostly discretionary programs totaling $1.2 trillion to kick in starting in 2013. The cuts, known as sequestration, apply to both domestic programs and defense spending.
Boiling pot of water

How Long Can Boehner Contain the Rebellion?

Conservatives will give him a chance for now, but their patience is almost out.
dolphin-pollution

EPA Funding Reductions Have Kneecapped Environmental Enforcement

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

Why House Conservatives Cheered the Sequester

There probably weren't any champagne bottles uncorked in the Capitol on Friday, but there's no question that House conservatives saw the arrival of automatic spending cuts known as the sequester as cause for celebration.
John Boehner

Who Birthed the Sequester?

To hear Republicans tell it, the White House all but single-handedly spawned the sequester. But Democrats say there is a lot more to the story.
Obama

Washington in 3 Words: Dumb, Arbitrary, and Inexcusable

U.S. leaders fail to lead on sequestration, but finger-pointing thrives.
nutrition training WIC in Dallas

Effects of Federal Budget Cuts on the Latino Community

Under the sequester, programs that offer preschool, nutritional assistance to pregnant women and their babies, and rental subsidies that are important to many of the country’s Latinos will face funding cuts.
Bernanke

Does Ben Bernanke Care Too Much About Jobs?

Critics say the Fed chair has tried so hard to get Americans back to work that he may cause another financial crisis.
Border

Furloughs Come to Main Street

Automatic spending cuts will affect federal workers wherever they live—even thousands of miles from Washington.
Money Roll

Sequester's Economic Impact Will Build Slowly

The inopportune moment of sequestration — hitting just as the economy shows bright spots — will create a drag on the economy in a slow-motion manner.
Capitol

Don't Expect Any Backroom Deals on Sequester — For Now

Chances are Congress will address the cuts after they've kicked in, using the regular legislative process.
John Boehner

How the Sequester Could Play Out

With sequestration all but certain to kick in Friday, there are several scenarios that may unfold. Here are some possibilities for the ensuing policy and politics.
John Boehner

How Both Sides Botched the Sequester Fight

The White House and congressional Republicans each notch tactical wins but fail on strategy.
Obama

Obama's Political Gamble on Sequestration Is Backfiring

Why President Obama's political gamble on sequestration could go bust.
Wall Street

Risk Is the Sequester's Only Certainty

You might have to wait longer in an airport line if the guillotine falls as scheduled Friday on $85 billion in federal spending. Your nearby national park might close earlier, and your schools might lose teachers.
Preschool children

The Overhyped, Overblown, & Overly Politicized Sequester Fears

It turns out that the next big fiscal crisis will seem more like a whimper when it hits on March 1.

White House sequester meeting? Cue Republican Eye Roll

Don't expect much out of Friday's meeting among President Obama and congressional leaders. Initial GOP reaction to the meeting? It's a farce.
Social Security Checks

Is Anything Safe From the Automatic Budget Cuts? Actually, a Few Things Are.

Yes, the across-the-board spending cuts set to go into effect on Friday are blunt. And it’s true they will affect most corners of the federal government. But some programs are safe. In fact, it’s a lot easier to identify what’s been spared the axe than what hasn’t, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.
Obama

Some Republicans Think They Can’t Lose on Sequestration

President Obama has been barnstorming across the country warning that if automatic, across-the-board spending cuts are allowed to take effect Friday, economic calamity would not be far behind.
Obama and Boehner

How (And Why) Obama and Boehner Should Strike a Spending-Cut Deal

Despite absolutist rhetoric, both sides have incentive to deal on sequestration.
Berlusconi

Don't Laugh at Italy's Elections

Italy is dealing with austerity – with less whining than we are.
Obama

What Is Sequestration and What Does It Mean for Me?

The massive spending cuts are broad, bad for states, bad for business, bad for the economy, and bad for a lot of people.
Bernanke hearing

Could Bernanke's Testimony Signal an Early End to Easy Money?

The Federal Reserve's balance sheet continues to grow. But for how long?
Harold Rogers

After the Sequester, Government Shutdown Looms

Congressional leaders are already shifting their focus to the next spending battle after the automatic budget sequester takes effect on Friday—how to keep the government running—but the Democratic strategy on this fight is far from set.
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.

The Airport Canary in the Sequestration Coal Mine

Being pissed off at the airport is something we all understand, so that's probably why everyone from President Obama to former White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles is talking about how much worse it will be for air travelers when automatic budget cuts go into effect on Friday. It's the public's common denominator.
David Krone

Who To Watch on Capitol Hill During the Sequestration Fight

Here are 5 leadership staffers critical to developing the policy proposals and political strategy of the sequestration battle.
Obama

Congress and Obama Assign Blame as Sequester Deadline Approaches

Just four days remain until Friday’s start date for federal spending cuts that were supposed to be too painful to ever let happen, but lawmakers return to Washington on Monday with little hope for an eleventh-hour deal to avert or reshape them—or any let-up in the fighting over who is to blame.

Insiders: Yes, Sequestration Will Really Hurt U.S. National Security

Insiders also support arming Syria's rebels.
Dr. Harry Chen

Why Medical Providers Don't Mind the Sequester

A grand bargain to reduce the budget deficit would sting health care providers. The sequester, by contrast, won’t really hurt.
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.
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
Brandon Singlaterry

The Young and the Powerless

Social Security and most of Medicare are exempt from automatic spending cuts. That means the sequester falls hardest on America's youth.

DCCC Hopes to Capitalize on Sequestration With New Web Ads

Amid signs of rising Republican worry over the politics of sequestration, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee released digital ads in 27 congressional districts targeting House Republicans over the coming budget cuts and layoffs. The online ad, which the DCCC indicated was the first par...
Lindsey Graham

Facing Primary Threat, Graham Rated 33rd Most Conservative

Already facing the prospect of a primary challenge in 2014, National Journal's 2012 Vote Ratings are hardly good news for Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., placing him in the bottom third of Republican senators when it comes to a conservative voting record.
Barack Obama SOTU

Can This Congress Be Saved?

National Journal’s annual vote ratings show a Congress as paralyzed and polarized as ever. But better days may lie ahead.
The Capitol building on the night of the State of the Union address

How the Continuing Resolution Got Pegged to March 4

The House will not take up a continuing resolution to keep the government funded before the week of March 4, but how it came to that starting date is the subject of some debate.
Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson

New Simpson-Bowles Plan Overstates the Deficit Problem

The country’s annual deficit is shrinking, for now, but that hasn’t stopped the two most prominent deficit hawks from waging an ongoing campaign for the elusive grand bargain.
Obama on Sequester

You May Be Right, Mr. President, But This Is Crazy

As the nation's chief executive, Obama is ultimately accountable for the budget fiasco, even if he is right on the merits and politics.
Capitol

Lawmakers Draw Fire for Taking Breaks Amid Fiscal Crises

Questions about the House and Senate work schedules are being raised as key deadlines loom on how to address the automatic sequester spending reductions, keep the federal government funded, and perhaps deal with another debt-ceiling crisis.
Marco Rubio cameras

Can Marco Rubio Live Up to the Hype?

He's the GOP's Barack Obama, a fresh-faced politician with an immigrant name, a playlist full of rap, and a collection of fawning press clips. The challenge: He's selling the same old party message.
Kevin McCarthy

House GOP Works to Unite Coalition Prior to Fiscal Fight

Top aides to House Republican leaders are quietly holding closed-door meetings with influential conservative pressure groups in an effort to coalesce the party’s oft-opposed elements ahead of the coming fiscal fights.

Will House Conservatives Support Rogers' Spending Proposal?

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., says he is preparing to introduce a bill to keep government agencies funded through the end of the fiscal year that will be written with a spending level beyond what Speaker John Boehner has promised rank-and-file conservatives.
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.

Full Text: Marco Rubio's 2013 State of the Union Response

The Office of Speaker Boehner released a transcript of Marco Rubio's State of the Union speech (as prepared for delivery). Read the full text of the rebuttal below:
Obama State of the Union 2012

Missed Opportunity? Obama May Avoid Spending-Cut Debate in Speech

When President Obama takes to the podium Tuesday night for the State of the Union, he’s expected to give scant attention to one of the most pressing issues facing Washington: the upcoming $85 billion in spending cuts.
Charles Dent

Don’t Call Them Moderates, but Centrist Republicans Are Emerging in the House

Much has been written about the hard-line House Republicans who have been making life tough for Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. But what about the collection of GOP colleagues who have stuck by his side, even when many in their own party are voting the other way?
113th Congress

Security Insiders: Sequestration Most Likely Scenario

Sequestration is now the most likely scenario, according to 78 percent of National Journal's National Security Insiders, who are not optimistic that Congress and the White House will reach a deal to reduce the deficit by the March 1 deadline.
Childrens Hospital

Heritage Lobbies Against Children's Hospital Funding—and House GOP Leadership

House Republicans are none too happy with the Heritage Foundation, saying the conservative group’s political arm used skewed data to lobby against a bill to fund children’s hospitals. 

Insiders Rate Jobs, Immigration, Deficit As Top Priorities

Despite the storied paralysis in Washington, Democratic and Republican Insiders came to a rare moment of consensus this week on what priorities should top their parties' agendas this year. What two issues should be the top priorities for your party this year?   Democrats (107 votes) Republicans (94 votes) Deficit reduction 21% 54% Energy 7% 7% Guns 14% 3% Immigration 64% 50% Jobs 66% 57% Tax reform 21% 24%
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.
Meat Inspection

Spending Cuts Stink, But They're Overhyped by Obama and Republicans Alike

Yes, sequestration is bad. But government agencies have an incentive to make it seem more dire than it is.

Paul Broun First to File for Ga. Senate Race

Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on Wednesday to run for Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss' seat, just hours before he is scheduled to make an announcement about the race in Atlanta. Broun is the first candidate to enter the race ahead of what is expected to...
Stern Obama

Spending Cut Shenanigans: Why Washington Will Fail America Again

The haphazard and the economy-slowing sequestration cuts look increasingly likely to take effect. But don’t worry – both sides have their butts covered.
Obama

How Republicans Came to Love Automatic Spending Cuts

Congressional Republicans work to prove they are tough enough to take the sequester.
Barack Obama

The 4 Political Realities Over the Budget-Cut Debate

The president wants to replace the automatic cuts, but he may not get what he wants.
Lehman Brothers Meltdown

Can Washington Break Its Addiction to Crisis Economics?

The country has lurched from one emergency to the next since 2007. Amid a rare lull, here's a modest plan of action for Congress and President Obama.
Ken Cuccinelli

Democrats Will Throw Book at Ken Cuccinelli

The Virginia attorney general's controversial comments in his new tome could backfire in governor's race.
Pittsburgh

Health Care: Great for the Economy Today, Terrible Later

Hospitals like Pittsburgh’s UPMC created enough jobs to end the recession. If they keep it up, they’ll wreck the economy.
Harry Reid

Harry Reid Puts His Legacy in the Hands of Others

The Senate majority leader wants other leaders to handle the most controversial legislation.

Senate to Vote on Debt Deal

The Democratic-controlled Senate is set to give final passage Thursday to a bill allowing the U.S. Treasury to keep borrowing money until May 19 and ward off the risk of default, putting off one battle as other fights loom with Republicans in upcoming weeks over automatic spending cuts and keeping the government operating.
Inauguration Photos from the Capitol

Worried GOP? Paul Ryan Has a Plan

Paul Ryan urges party unity in speech at National Review Institute summit.
Empty Target

Why the Vote to Suspend the Debt Ceiling Didn't End the Threat to the U.S. Economy

Delaying the fight could make matters worse if it just puts the economy in a holding pattern for the next several months.
Ted Cruz

Cruz to Oppose Boehner’s Debt-Limit Fix

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, will not vote for the House-passed debt-ceiling bill because it does not include spending cuts, his office said on Wednesday.
Inauguration day

Austerity, Not Default, Is Now the Only Threat to America's Economy

Hooray, we're not a banana republic! But we still might become Europe.
Obama, Boehner and Reid on Inauguration Day

Obama-Boehner Relationship Plunges to New Low With 'Annihilate' Remark

Ouch! President Obama’s inaugural speech hit a raw nerve with House Speaker John Boehner. 
Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell

Once Unthinkable, Severe Spending Cuts Now Seem Plausible

Senators increasingly see the sequester as the best deal either side can get.
Boehner

How Boehner Tamed an Unruly GOP Caucus

John Boehner is finally learning how to tame the rebellious House GOP caucus. The passage on Wednesday of a measure allowing the Treasury to keep borrowing money until May 19 warded off the risk of a debt default that could have been politically disastrous for Republicans. 
Dave Camp

Is the GOP's Debt-Ceiling Proposal Constitutional?

A House Republican proposal to suspend the debt limit until mid-May will take worries of a potential default off the table for a while. But for lawmakers, there's a catch. If they fail to pass a budget this spring, they will not get paid.
Patty Murray

Senate Budget Chairwoman: Senate Will Pass a Budget

The Senate’s new Budget Committee chairwoman says that the chamber will act on a budget plan this spring for the first time in four years.

Boehner Has Momentum on Debt Plan

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE BOEHNER HAS MOMENTUM ON DEBT PLAN. House Speaker John Boehner is gaining momentum ahead of Wednesday’s critical vote to raise the debt limit temporarily, National Journal’s Shane Goldmacher reports. No...
Obama gives Inauguration speech at the Capitol

Honesty is Needed to Save the Great Society

President Obama placed the “makers” versus “takers” debate squarely before Congress and the country. In its own way, Obama’s stout defense of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid served as the preamble to the coming clashes over the debt ceiling, the sequester, and a soon-to-expire continuing resolution funding the government. This trio of fiscal deadlines must, necessarily, concentrate legislative and political minds.
Harry Reid

Senate Dems Likely to Pass GOP Debt Limit Fix

Senate Democrats think a Republican move to suspend the debt limit, instead of increasing it, kills GOP leverage in the next fiscal fight. So they'll sign on.  
Tim Huelskamp

Momentum Builds for Boehner Plan but Trap Remains

John Boehner’s push to raise the debt limit temporarily is gaining momentum ahead of a critical Wednesday vote, but conservatives set a final hurdle: a more public promise of a 10-year balanced budget. 

House Vote to Block Federal Workers' Pay Raise Postponed

Republican leaders have postponed a vote planned for this week on a bill to block President Obama’s proposed across-the-board pay increase for federal workers in 2013.

Conservative Republicans Losing Steam on Default Dare

House Republican leadership appears to have quieted naysayers on their right who recently seemed hungry to threaten default and defy conventional arguments that such a hardline stance would trigger crisis.

Conservative Group Gets Out of Boehner's Way on Debt Limit

In a boost for Speaker John Boehner, the conservative Club for Growth announced Tuesday that it won't oppose the House GOP-backed bill to raise the debt limit.
Aerial of the Pentagon

Insiders: Go Ahead, Slash the Defense Budget

Defense cuts may be on the table in a new fiscal-cliff deal, as the deadline to avoid sequestration is just weeks away. National Journal's National Security Insiders say: Go for it.

Insiders: Dems Have Upper Hand in Debt Ceiling Negotiation

National Journal’s political insiders came to a rare point of consensus on which party had the upper hand in the upcoming talks over the debt ceiling: Democrats. A full 83 percent of Democratic Insiders gave the edge to their own party, with a slightly fewer than half of GOP Insiders agreeing with their assessment. Only 19 percent of the Republicans said the GOP had the upper hand, with more—about a third—saying the parties' political standing heading into negotiations were about equal. The survey results showed a marked shift since the last time the White House and congressional Republicans faced off over the debt ceiling the last time, in early 2011 after Democrats took a brutal beating in the midterm elections. Politically speaking, who has the upper hand in the upcoming talks over the debt ceiling?   Democrats (106 votes) Republicans (100 votes) Democrats 83% 49% Republicans 3% 19% About equal 14% 32%
John Boehner

GOP Says It Can Threaten Senate Pay in Budget Fight

House Republican leaders said Friday that they will schedule a vote next week on a plan to extend the nation’s debt ceiling for three months, but that it would also require the Democratic-controlled Senate to pass a budget by April 15 for the first time in four years or see senators’ pay withheld.
S&P Headquarters

How Washington's Disarray Could Prompt Another Credit Downgrade

Raising the nation’s borrowing limit, and thus avoiding a historic default, isn’t enough to prevent a potential downgrade. Not by a long shot.
John Boehner and Paul Ryan

Why the GOP's Debt-Limit Fix is All Flash and No Bang

House Republicans will leave Williamsburg with a nice piece of political strategy that does almost nothing to solve the underlying policy puzzles that threaten to throw the country back into recession.
FILE: Paul Ryan

House GOP Seeing Sequester, Not Debt Ceiling, As Fight to Pick

Republicans appear to be willing to avoid a showdown over the debt limit and instead use the sequester as their main negotiating lever in upcoming fiscal fights with the White House and Senate Democrats.
Jerry Brown

Why the Democrats Are Golden in California

Demographic shifts and coastal liberalism have given huge power to Democrats. They control the state – but there's restlessness on the left.
Sea mine in the water

The Next Fiscal Showdowns That Could Ruin Us

Both parties fantasize about a grand bargain. In the real world, they’ll be lucky to avoid a fiscal catastrophe.
Machu Picchu

How Mini-Cliffs Could Ruin Obama's Second Term

The GOP strategy to keep the focus on budget issues might thwart action on energy, immigration, and guns.
Paul Ryan

Ryan: GOP Considering Short-Term Debt-Limit Extension

The Budget Committee chairman says the approach would enable the House to negotiate with President Obama and the Democratic-led Senate in March on a broader plan to tackle the nation’s fiscal problems.
Nancy Pelosi

Pelosi Announces New Chief of Staff

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi announced that Nadeam Elshami--her communications director--will take over as her chief of staff, succeeding John Lawrence who will leave on Feb. 1 after eight years in that position.

What Treasury's 'Least Harmful' Debt-Ceiling Response Looks Like

If Congress misses the deadline for raising the country's borrowing limit, the Treasury Department may start playing catch-up on the nation's bills.
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.”
Daniel Day-Lewis in Lincoln

Republicans Spurned 'Lincoln' Screening, State Dinners in Obama First Term

President Obama says he’d like to socialize with Republicans, but they aren’t responding to his overtures. Five Republicans even said no to a Lincoln screening with cast members and director Steven Spielberg.
Obama

How Obama Is Winning Debt-Ceiling Politics — And Why it Doesn't Matter

The president holds a press conference to keep the heat on Congress, but Congress may be impervious to public opinion.
Obama Press conference

Obama Leans on Metaphors to Press Case on Debt Limit

President Obama covered themes ranging from gambling to guns to dining out as he rolled out metaphors on Monday to push his message on the debt ceiling. 
Obama

Obama's Message to Republicans: I Won

President Obama had a simple message at his press conference on Monday: I won the election, and, this time, that’s going to mean something. Long gone was the chastened president of 2011 who often seemed tentative in the wake of the Republican takeover of the House. In his place was a man clearly convinced that the country that voted for him 10 weeks ago has his back today in his battles with Congress.
President Obama Nominates Jack Lew for Treasury Secretary

What Treasury Secretary Jack Lew Needs to Do

If confirmed as the next Treasury secretary, White House Chief of Staff Jacob Lew will be tagging into an immediate three-round fight, with a long tournament ahead.
Fiscal Cliff talks at the Oval Office

Democrats and Republicans Missed a Big Opportunity

Over the long term, the fiscal-cliff deal will make it harder for both the Left and the Right to achieve their goals.
Food Fight

Are Voters Really Bothered by GOP Turmoil?

Democrats say they can win back the House by depicting the GOP as too fractious to get anything done. We’ll see.
Boehner and Cantor

Divided House GOP to Huddle on Strategy

It’s called the House GOP’s annual issues “retreat.” But political “war council” might be a better description of what’s ahead when Speaker John Boehner and his rank-and-file Republicans trek next week to Williamsburg, Va., for a private three-day meeting.
Jack Lew Testifies on Capitol Hill in 2011

Sessions, Sanders Say Lew's Not the Man for the Treasury Job

White House Chief of Staff Jacob Lew has been nominated to serve as the country’s next Treasury Secretary. But before he sets foot in Capitol Hill to testify for his confirmation, some GOP lawmakers say they oppose his nomination.
Jacob Lew

Blocking Lew Gets the GOP Nowhere in Debt Ceiling Fight

Republicans have made it clear. They are looking for a pound of flesh in the form of spending cuts in exchange for solving the next fiscal-crisis-in-waiting -- the debt ceiling. And while some aides might whisper about blocking a Treasury nominee to gain leverage, the GOP won't win on the debt ceiling -- even optically -- by employing that tactic.  
Obama During 2011 Debt Fight

Debt-Limit Fight Seem Played Out? It Is

If the back-and-forth arguments over the upcoming debt-ceiling fight seem played out, that’s because they are—and they were, even 50 years ago.
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