NJ Topics Executive Branch

Barack Obama

White House Threatens Veto as House Takes Up Farm Bill

The Obama administration opposes deep cuts proposed to the food-stamp program.
obama

President Obama's Uphill Defense of the NSA Surveillance: Trust Us, Because ... Trust Us

In an interview with Charlie Rose, the president's defense of the NSA program hits a dead end.
Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin

United States, Russia Enter Into New Arms-Security Agreement

WASHINGTON -- The United States is entering into a new agreement with Russia that would continue in some form the Cooperative Threat Reduction program that aims to lock down vulnerable nuclear materials in the former Soviet Union, Global Security Newswire has learned.
Eric and Diana Cantor

For Billionaire Ron Perelman, Cantor’s Wife Is Just Latest Board Pick From Political World

The financial and major donor has a long history of putting the politically connected on his payroll.
John Boehner

House Faces Off on Farm Bill, Late-Term Abortions

The Senate continues its floor focus on amendments to its immigration-reform bill.
G-8 protests

How NSA Surveillance Jeopardizes Obama's G-8 Trip to Europe

Obama's task in Europe this week has been made even more challenging by the recent disclosures of American surveillance in allied countries.
Cheney

In Rare Interview, Dick Cheney Champions NSA Surveillance

But he doesn't quite throw his support to President Obama: "I'm obviously not a fan."

Special Issue: 50 Innovators and Back in Business Forum

The Back in Business initiative is the result of a five-month project, in which a team of National Journal's journalists combed the country to identify some of the top innovators in business, local government, and the civic sector--creative thinkers who have come up with inventive responses to a diverse array of America's problems. 
Syria

Slip-Sliding Toward Obama’s Third War

The president "owns Syria now," but does he realize it?
Radio Tower illustration

Fixing the Spectrum Crunch, One Federal Agency at a Time

A new White House initiative seeks to bring even more of the airwaves to the public.
Ronald Machen, Jr.

Meet Obama's Leak Plumber

As U.S. Attorney, Ronald Machen has labeled a Fox News reporter a co-conspirator. He may even get a crack at Edward Snowden. 
Barack Obama

Economy Expectations May Be Giving Obama a Lift

The recovery may be offsetting any recent controversies that would otherwise hurt the president's approval rating. 
Edward Snowden

Edward Snowden Is Completely Wrong

Whether he's a hero or traitor, Americans are already so acclimated to the loss of privacy that his revelations won't unnerve them much. 
La Cygne Generating Station

How Green Groups Make the EPA Issue New Rules

By suing the agency—which is only too happy to settle—green advocates have compelled it to issue a raft of regulations. 
Jon Liebowitz

Why We Lack Good Privacy Guidelines

Technology innovations have served to strip away privacy. They could also be the key to restoring it.
Edward Snowden

Poll: Is Edward Snowden a Whistle-Blower or a Traitor?

Democrats are divided, but Republican Insiders say he's gone too far.
Farm Bill

Farm Bill Could Pass the House Next Week, Agriculture Committee Chairman Says

House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, R-Okla., said Thursday he believes that the farm bill will come up on the House floor next week and could be finished in two days.
two bombs exploded, at Qazaz neighborhood in Damascus, Syria

White House: Syria Has Used Chemical Weapons

Reports circulate the U.S. will train and arm rebels within Jordan.
panera bread

The Panera Model: How to Do Good and Make Money at the Same Time

With no cash registers and no prices, Panera Bread's pay-what-you-want cafés are "a test of humanity."
Bubbles in water

When Ordinary Americans Accomplish What the Government Can’t

Washington may be paralyzed by partisanship, but across the country, grassroots innovators are crafting solutions to our problems.
Family Independence Initiative

A Poverty Program That Works

A Bay Area program rewards initiative instead of need, hands the reins to families themselves, and leverages the power of social networks. 
Idaho Education Network

Classrooms That Span the Vast Expanse

The Idaho Education Network figured out how to teach a wide range of subjects to students spread across that rural state. 
William Kirwan

Education

Southern New Hampshire University Online Learning; Valencia College President Sandy Shugart; Arizona State University President Michael Crow; University of Maryland Chancellor William Kirwan.
Purpose Built Communities

Disrupting Government

The Mission Continues; Year Up; Purpose Built Communities; New Leaders.
Bangladesh Garment Factory Collapse

Labor Department Offers $2.5 Million to Improve Bangladeshi Factory Conditions

If the garment industry wasn't taking this seriously after the factory collapse, it now has a large added incentive.

Inside The House Armed Services Committee

The House Armed Services Committee is responsible for authorizing an annual Defense Department budget of more than half a trillion dollars at a time when defense spending, for the first time in perhaps decades, is not treated across the political spectrum as sacrosanct. The result is that committee Chairman Buck McKeon and his defense-conscious colleagues are left to fend off—or at least try to mitigate and manage—what looks to be inevitable: a Pentagon budget spiraling downward, after two long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Add to that the declining power of Armed Services and other committees in an era when the House leadership is firmly in charge of fiscal matters, and it's not easy being a defense hawk these days. National Journal Daily's Special Issue goes inside the committee to profile the major players and examine the issues at stake. Major Battles Ahead in the CommitteeOn Aug. 1, 2011, hours before the government was set to default on its debt, House Speaker John Boehner convened Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee in his office to discuss a legislative solution. The deal on the table, called the Budget Control Act, contained nearly a half-trillion-dollar cut in defense spending over the next decade and raised the prospect of another $500 billion reduction through a last-resort mechanism known as sequestration. The speaker, encouraging votes for the deal, said the latter would never happen. And later that day, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon, R-Calif., publicly announced his support for the bill. Like Boehner, he considered the prospect of sequestration so terrible as to render it all but impossible. While no Armed Services chairman would ever want to put the defense budget on the bargaining table, let alone in jeopardy of indiscriminate cuts, McKeon found himself doing exactly that. He voted for—and encouraged others to support—legislation he would spend the next 22 months trying to undo. And the tough decisions are far from over. A Committee Chairman's Job is Never EasyDefense spending used to be sacred to Republicans. But the House's influx of lawmakers raring to cut the deficit makes HASC Chairman Buck McKeon's job harder. In an era of intense fiscal pressure, McKeon, who hails from the party that believed in "peace through strength," sees it as his duty to show his colleagues why Congress needs to fund defense programs. Insiders: House Armed Services Committee Not as Powerful as in the PastThe House Armed Services Committee is not as powerful as it used to be, 86 percent of National Journal's National Security Insiders said. Graphic: Representing DefenseMembers of Congress might join the House Armed Services Committee because of policy expertise or personal experience, but there are geographic reasons as well. Members looking to gain knowledge of and influence over the military issues that affect their districts can do so more easily from a place on the Armed Services panel. Two Defense-Panel Chairmen Are Tightly BondedOther House lawmakers, aides to both men, and defense-budget watchers outside of Congress describe House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon and Rep. Bill Young, the top gun on the House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, as seeming to have a genuine mutual respect and a cooperative spirit in their roles in authorizing and appropriating roughly a half-trillion dollars in defense funding. A Hollow Military Again?The problem for military leaders now is that the drawdown from the post-9/11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan comes not at the best of times but arguably at the worst. Consider the simple fact that readiness problems that took many years to carve out the force in the late 1970s are already affecting today's military. And more than a year still remains before the last of the 63,000 U.S. troops fighting in Afghanistan are scheduled to come home. Smith Takes a Realistic View on FundingSmith acknowledges the first round of defense cuts—and maybe more—are inevitable in tight fiscal times, and he says he is committed to helping the Pentagon make reductions. He would even support the Pentagon's request for base realignments and closures, a controversial proposal widely considered dead on arrival in Congress. "I, like everyone else, wish there was more money, but there's not," Smith says. "You've got to live in the world we're in, not in the world you want to be in." Legislative Comrades-in-Arms Tend to Put Politics AsideA long line of former active-duty military personnel seek out an Armed Services post after winning election to Congress. True to its name, the panel is populated by members—and staffers—who have served in uniform. And regardless of background, each member brings something that can't be taught to nonveterans on the committee: first-person knowledge. Defense Industry Focused on SequestrationNo one has been able to successfully wrangle Congress into reaching a grand bargain to reduce the deficit. But it's not for lack of trying. Ever since the Budget Control Act was signed in 2011, the genesis of the deep spending cuts associated with sequestration, Washington's powerful defense lobby has been working to change it. Buck McKeon's Inner CircleMeet the 14 people inside the Beltway who are closest to Buck McKeon.
Chris Christie

Three Signs Republicans Haven't Learned Any Lessons From 2012

After their drubbing in 2012, Republicans vowed to change their ways. But as 2013 wears on, they're sticking to the script that got them in trouble. 
Gabriel Gomez

Republicans Begging for Money to Put Massachusetts Senate Seat In Play

Despite polls showing the race competitive, GOP outside groups aren't buying.
Domino's Pizza

Domino’s Pizza Delivers Big for Eric Cantor

As the pizza giant's stock soared, Eric Cantor's wife sat on Domino's board of directors and made off with a financial windfall.
McKeon's Inner Circle

Buck McKeon's Inner Circle

Meet the 14 people inside the Beltway who are closest to Buck McKeon.
RANKING PROFILE

Rep. Adam Smith Takes a Realistic View on Funding

House Armed Services' ranking member acknowledges some defense cuts are inevitable in tight fiscal times, and he says he is committed to helping the Pentagon make reductions. 
SERVICE

Legislative Comrades-in-Arms Tend to Put Politics Aside

A long line of former active-duty military personnel have sought an Armed Services Committee post after winning election to Congress. Each brings something that can’t be taught to nonveterans: first-person knowledge.
INDUSTRY

Defense Industry Focused on Sequestration

No one has been able to successfully wrangle Congress into reaching a grand bargain to reduce the deficit. But it’s not for lack of trying.
MILITARY

A Hollow Military Again?

The looming postwar drawdown of the U.S. armed forces will prove the most challenging of modern times.
MAINBAR

Major Battles in the House Armed Services Committee

On Aug. 1, 2011, hours before the government was set to default on its debt, House Speaker John Boehner convened Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee in his office to discuss a legislative solution.
CHAIR

A Committee Chairman’s Job Is Never Easy

It’s tough to chair a 62-member panel responsible for authorizing roughly half a trillion dollars that funds America’s defenses. Just ask Rep. Buck McKeon.
INSIDERS POLL

Insiders: House Armed Services Committee Not as Powerful as in the Past

Some of National Journal's National Security Insiders point to the "emasculation of the chairman" as a key reason the panel has lost influence.
Jenness Simler

Jenness Simler, Majority Policy Director

As majority policy director on the House Armed Services Committee, Jenness Simler has a wide range of responsibilities, from managing strategy and committee organization to advising the chairman.
Roger Zakheim

Roger Zakheim, Majority Deputy Chief of Staff/Counsel

Roger Zakheim, deputy chief of staff and counsel for the majority on the House Armed Services Committee, got his first taste of Hill life at age 14.
Debra Wada

Debra Wada, Democratic Staffer, Military Personnel

Debra Wada, who previously served as deputy staff director on the House Armed Services Committee when Democrats held the majority, now specializes in military-personnel issues.
Paul Arcangeli

Paul Arcangeli, Minority Staff Director

Paul Arcangeli announced the beginning of a "reign of terror" after taking the helm of the committee staff when Democrats were in the majority. "You can call me Mr. Arcangeli or O Dark Lord," Arcangeli joked.
Edward Snowden, NSA Leaker

Why I Don't Care About Edward Snowden

Hero or traitor? The White House would love to distract us from its actions.
ben hecht

When Cities Aren't Enough

Living Cities CEO Ben Hecht explains why private institutions can be the key to helping cities improve low-income communities.

The Scan - June 12, 2013

Tom Steyer

TransCanada Steps Up Defense of Keystone XL Pipeline

Faced with formidable opposition from environmentalists, TransCanada is redoubling its efforts to rebut claims made against its flagship project.
Mandela

Are South Africans Ready for a Future Without Nelson Mandela?

It's not so much his day-to-day impact people fear losing, it's something more esoteric. They're afraid of losing his idea.

Insiders: Congress Ineffective in Oversight of National Security

Three-quarters of Insiders said Congress ineffectively oversees the executive branch's national security programs.
Roy Blunt

Why the GOP Isn't Attacking Obama Over Data Collection

Recent reports that showed the breadth of the government’s secret information-gathering have divided congressional Republicans.
Sen. John Cornyn

Immigration-Reform Advocates Brace for Flood of Amendments

The verbal slugfest over border security is likely to dominate proceedings the rest of the week.
Markey

Senate Race in Massachusetts Features First Real ‘Climate Candidate’

In his quest to become the next senator from Massachusetts, Democratic Rep. Edward Markey is doing something that’s never been done before: campaigning for national office on the signature issue of climate change.

The Scan - June 11, 2013

Doug Bailey

Hotline Founder Doug Bailey Passes Away

One of the fathers of the modern political consulting industry who went on to found The Hotline, passed away Sunday night in his sleep. He was 79.  
Edward Snowden, NSA Leaker

Why Insiders, Not Hackers, Are the Biggest Threat to Cybersecurity

Edward Snowden may have been serving the public good. But his case reminds us that employees often pose a greater risk than foreign cyberspies.
Sen. Ron Wyden

Two Senate Panels Compete for Control Over Ethanol Mandate

The federal mandate that biofuels be mixed with gasoline continues to be a political lightning rod.
Barbara Boxer

Government’s Data Grabs Are Unlikely to Prompt Legislative Action

Despite the political and media furor surrounding the NSA, the appetite among some top lawmakers for undoing the legislation is meager.
obama

President Obama: If You Trust Your Congress, Trust in the NSA Data Collection

"But if you look at the details ... I think we have struck a nice balance." 
Stern Obama

How Obama Scandals Threaten to Kill 'Good Government'

Emerging narrative supports claims that Washington is intrusive, incompetent, untrustworthy and heartless.
Jobs fair

The New Jobs Report in 2 Charts

The U.S. economy added 175,000 jobs in May, beating expectations, and the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 7.6%. Here’s the breakdown of employment status for all Americans age 16 and above:
Eric Holder

What Happened to Eric Holder?

He was a Reagan-appointed judge and a Clinton-appointed prosecutor respected by both sides. Then it all fell apart.
Syria Civil War

How America Lost Its Nerve

Policymakers used to believe in a forceful projection of American authority. But after Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, they are turning inward. 
Congressional Baseball Game

The Most Contested Turf in Congress Isn’t Where You Think

Democrats have spent recent years thrashing Republicans on the baseball diamond. Now the GOP thinks it found its secret weapons. 
IRS Scandal

Why the IRS Scandals Make It Hard to Fix the IRS

On the one hand, it helps the momentum for tax reform. On the other hand, wonks are now investigating alleged wrongdoing rather than devising new policy. 
Nuclear Plant

What Happens When Our Nuclear-Power Fleet Is Older Than You Are?

America’s best source for zero-carbon energy is slowly withering, and it’s unlikely to be replenished. 
Marco Rubio

The Two Faces of Marco Rubio

He's trying to be both a high-level negotiator and a disappointed populist. With the immigration bill, he’ll eventually have to choose.
Supreme Court

All Those People Who Were Supposed to Get Insurance Probably Won’t

The decision holding that "Obamacare" was legal was seen as a victory. But it eviscerated Obama's plan to cover poor and disabled Americans.
Brack Obama, Xi Jinping

Who Has the Upper Hand in the U.S.-China Relationship?

The presidents of both countries promise a more candid and equal relationship in their next meeting. 
Priebus

Why Republicans Can Get Away With Ignoring Their Problems

The GOP can enjoy another strong midterm election in 2014 without doing much more to attract young or minority voters.

Poll: Which Party Is Doing a Better Job Recruiting Candidates for 2014?

Most Insiders say their own party is doing well.
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper

James Clapper Clarifies Remarks Over NSA Snooping

Director of national intelligence clarifies remarks over NSA snooping, says Benghazi culprits were a "mixed bag."
Eric Holder

Holder Declines to Publicly Discuss Government's Collection of Phone Records

The attorney general said it wasn't the department's intention to grab Congress's or the Supreme Court's records.
White House Press

Hey, Reporters, Republicans Have Some Tips

Stumped about what questions you should ask White House press secretary Jay Carney at the next briefing? Fear not, D.C. media. Even though it may be your job to come up with questions, major Republican groups have some suggestions for you.
Drone

Play of the Day: A Delicious, Dangerous Use for Drones

Fast forward to 2:15 to see Letterman explain how the FAA and Domino's got into some recent trouble with the drones.
Terry McAuliffe

Terry McAuliffe Tests Obama Playbook in Virginia

Whether the president's campaign tactics will translate to any other Democrat will be tested in pivotal governor's race.
Max Baucus and Dave Camp

House GOP Leaders Limit Revenue Bills to Stall Senate

By withholding action on revenue bills, House leaders can limit the Senate's options.
Lincoln, FDR, Bush and Obama

Obama Won't Be the Last Wartime President to Break the Rules

Obama is just the latest commander-in-chief to step over the line in the name of national security.  
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice.

Republicans Hold Fire on Rice, but Controversy Still Looms

Without any leverage to block Susan Rice from succeeding Tom Donilon as President Obama's national security adviser, Republicans appeared resigned to her appointment Wednesday, but unready to let go of doubts about the administration's leadership on national security issues.
Susan Rice and Sam Power

In Scandals' Wake, Obama's Hardball Tactics Could Backfire

By appointing loyalists and dismissing GOP criticisms, the White House is cocooning itself -- just as voters are growing critical. 
walnut way home

Changing an Urban Neighborhood, One Peach Orchard at a Time

A Milwaukee couple's nonprofit combats poverty with block parties and community gardens.
David Plouffe

Mild-Mannered David Plouffe Is a Terror on Twitter

As doubts about Obama's credibility rise, former White House adviser goes on the attack.
Susan Rice

Susan Rice Taking Over for Tom Donilon Despite Benghazi Mess

President Obama will elevate U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice to national security adviser, a politically aggressive move in the face of Republican fury over her mischaracterization of the fatal attacks on American diplomats in Benghazi.
Rep. Darrell Issa

Top Republicans Let Darrell Issa Off the Leash

When Darrell Issa called Jay Carney a "paid liar" this week, his critics figured he'd finally gone too far—that his one-step-ahead-of-the-facts rhetoric would force Republicans to rein him in. They figured wrong.
Obama

Vacancy Packing: Obama Emerges From His Five-Year Appeals-Court Nap

Picking a judicial nomination fight used to be rare. But in the past two decades, it has become a burdensome and often ugly blood sport.
Kirsten Gillibrand

Senators Spar Over Bill on Sexual Assault in the Military

Stark battle lines are emerging in the Senate over efforts to stamp out the military’s reputation for providing inadequate protections for victims of sexual assault.
Barack Obama

3 Signs The White House Is Finding Its Footing

Obama increasingly inclined to cast his GOP critics as partisan.
mobile phone europe

Europe Isn't Giving Wireless Carriers a Pass on Net Neutrality. Why Should We?

Wireless carriers, you're on notice.
IRS building

Play of the Day: The IRS Says 'Lets Dance!'

Fast forward to 3:20 to see the some possible jobs for Holder, based on "his look."
Carl Levin and John McCain

Sandra Fluke Redux? Senate Stacks the Deck Against Reformers in Sexual Assaults Crisis

​House Republicans set off a firestorm last year when they held a hearing on contraception without inviting any women. ​Get ready for round two. 
President Barack Obama chats with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during the start of a dinner at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, March 28, 2010.

Obama Hesitant to Commit Troops in Afghanistan Beyond 2014

Top aide: President wants to see how Afghan security forces and politicians perform before deciding.
Howard

House Armed Services Chairman Demands Pentagon's Military Options for Syria

Legislation rolled out on Monday would require the U.S. Defense Department to inform lawmakers regarding "a variety of options" for potential military involvement in the Syrian civil war and what resources would be needed to carry them out.
Darrell Issa

Issa Stirs Echoes of McCarthy as Obama's 'Best Friend' in IRS Probe

Chief GOP investigator doesn't know when to let damning facts speak for themselves.
Danny Werfel

Back in Session, Congress Returns Attention to IRS

Congress returns from a weeklong recess with inquiries into the Internal Revenue Service still atop its agenda, as three more hearings have been set and a lawsuit has been filed in federal court.
Obama announcement on IRS

Environmentalists Unite in Quest to Fight Global Warming

The nation's environmental leaders are mounting a double battle against global warming, and they see President Obama's remaining time in the White House as critical in winning both of them.
Obama economy

Is Obama OK With the Status Quo?

Perhaps the most notable thing about President Obama's reported choice of Jason Furman to be chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers is what it doesn't portend: change.
Eric Holder

7 Reasons Why the Media Shouldn't Keep Eric Holder's Secrets

What "off the record" means and why it matters to you.
 E.W. Jackson

Republican Red Flags All Over in Bellwether States

The GOP struggles in Virginia and Colorado don't bode well for the party's long-term health.
Middle Class Home

Is the Housing News Really that Good?

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Charles Chuck Grassley

Parties Prepare to Reverse Rhetoric on 'Nuclear Option' for Judicial Nominees

Watching Sen. Chuck Grassley rail against President Obama for "court packing" made me laugh out loud. I laughed for several reasons. One was wondering whether a senior senator and longtime member of the Judiciary Committee really had no idea what court packing is, or was he reaching for new heights of disingenuousness: How could a move by a president simply to fill long-standing existing vacancies on federal courts be termed court packing?
Smithfield

China Wants Our Bacon—and Our Hot Dogs

A Chinese firm wants to purchase Smithfield. Here's the government panel that could stop them. 
U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander

Lamar Alexander Unveils His Maverick GOP Vision for Energy Future

The Republican senator from deep-red Tennessee gives a high-profile speech laying out a blueprint that includes a direct acknowledgment of the problem of global warming caused by carbon pollution and that calls for more, not less, government spending on clean-energy research.
Eric Holder

House Republicans Accuse Holder of 'Contradictions' in Testimony on Press E-Mails

The Attorney General has been ordered to respond to a list of questions by June 5.
apple tim cook china

How Hard Will Lisa Jackson Pressure Apple's Suppliers on the Environment?

The former EPA chief has a record of fighting greenhouse emissions. Dealing with the tech firm's foreign contractors presents a different challenge.
guitars

What Does the IRS Scandal Say About a 2011 Guitar Raid?

Rep. Marsha Blackburn sees conservatives being targeted everywhere.
Eric Holder

Why a Media Shield Law Isn't Enough to Save Journalists

The only way journalists will be protected is if prosecutors stop being so quick to go after them.

The NRCC Still Loves George W. Bush

For all the talk of retrofitting their brand for the future, national Republicans are still finding fundraising success in their past. As it turns out, George W. Bush is still worth a buck or two to his party. The National Republican Congressional Committee last month launched an online engagement...
Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant

Obama Campaign Group Targets Climate Change

While President Obama's reelection campaign was almost completely silent on the issue of climate change, Organizing for Action, the advocacy group tooled from his 2012 campaign machine, has launched a campaign designed to build support for the president's climate-change agenda.
Supreme Court Prop 8

4 Cases the Supreme Court Must Still Decide

With a little less than a month remaining in the current Supreme Court term, several major cases are still outstanding that could have widespread political impact.
Vietnam Veterans Memorial

How We Could Do More For Our Vets

We need to go into debt to pay our debt to U.S. veterans to make sure they get the care and services we owe them.
Rick Renzi

The Curious Case of Rick Renzi

With the long-awaited corruption trial in Arizona of former three-term Rep. Rick Renzi as the legal battleground, House Republican and Democratic leaders are accusing the Justice Department of seeking to undercut special constitutional protections afforded to federal lawmakers and their legislative acts.
Obama and Christie meet and greet

Jersey Shore Reunion: What's in It for Obama and Christie?

The president and the GOP governor get together on the coast for a visit freighted with politics.
Bush Clinton Obama

What If the Next President Is Even Worse?

Partisanship shouldn't blind Americans to Bush-Obama civil-liberty threats.
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.
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.
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."
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.
capitol

The Cabal That Quietly Took Over the House

For 40 years, the Republican Study Committee has prized ideological purity over partisan loyalty. That mindset now dominates the GOP. 
Syria Body Bags

Washington’s Other Scandal: Syria

The obsession over the IRS, hacked reporters, and Benghazi has overshadowed a very real, and increasingly urgent, problem. 
Bureaucrat

The IRS Was Built to Be Tone Deaf

Insularity and autonomy were once thought to be key ingredients for a nonpartisan tax-collecting agency. 
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.
Guantanamo detention facility at dawn

Obama’s 20 Steps to Counterterrorism

Unpacking the president's hour-long (with heckling) speech on drones, Gitmo, and everything in between. 
Reince Priebus

How Reince Priebus Crossed the Line

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

GOP’s Switch on Financial Disclosure Wins Gold Medal in Hypocrisy Olympics

First, let me be clear: There has been political intimidation of the Internal Revenue Service and other government agencies for partisan purposes.
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.
IRS

State of Play: Where the IRS Case Stands After 3 Hearings

Three IRS hearings are in the books. Two senior IRS officials are on their way out. And one key witness has invoked the Fifth Amendment. Here are the story lines to follow next.
Iraq

Can Obama End the 'Forever War'?

Ahead of Thursday's speech, the president is trying to narrow the use of drones.
Reagan and Clinton

Wait About Two Months, Then Check the President's Approval Rating

President Obama's approval rating in several recently released polls suggests that the three controversies his administration is navigating have not begun to sting him.
J. Russell George

Meet the Man Who Set Off the IRS Firestorm

All the attention this scandal has brought is new for him, but this inspector general has operated in the halls of power his entire career. He worked for Bob Dole and in President George H.W. Bush’s White House, and in between, he attended Harvard Law School alongside a young Michelle—soon-to-be Obama—Robinson.
Obama School

President Obama: Mourner-in-Chief

The president's most memorable speeches have come in the wake of tragedy.
President Obama in Rose Garden

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

Unconstitutional. Sweeping. Secretive. Abusive. Harassing.
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.
Obama talks about Oklahoma tornado

Don't Hold Your Breath Waiting for Public Opinion to Turn Against Obama

The president has a base of loyalists that won't quit and, at least for now, there's no evidence he was involved in any scandals.
President Barack Obama chats with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during the start of a dinner at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, March 28, 2010.

Which Is More Corrupt: Afghanistan or America?

Karzai cash payments highlight a growing friction as Afghans blame NATO for their poor reputation.
pod thumb

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

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Catfish

The U.S. Wants to Inspect Your Catfish, Twice

The farm bill has a reputation, and it’s not a good one.
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.
Jay Carney

Why You Can't Trust the White House (Even If Nobody's Lying)

Shifting stories cast doubts on answer to core question: Did Team Obama know about IRS abuse in real time?
Devastation in Moore, Okla.

After the Oklahoma Tornado, Obama Needs to Make FEMA Work

In the wake of the tornado that cut through Moore, Okla., on Monday, it's worth remembering, for a moment, how wrong things went after Hurricane Andrew. 
Mitch McConnell

Republicans Are Watching Their Rhetoric on Obama Scandals

It's more likely to hear Nixon comparisons from Bob Woodward or Bob Schieffer than GOP leaders.

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.
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.”
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.
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.
Obama Sein

Human-Rights Groups Criticize Obama's Meeting With Myanmar Leader

After months of praising Myanmar for its political reforms, President Obama welcomed the country's president to the White House for the first time in nearly 50 years. But human-rights groups are not happy about the invitation.
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.
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.    
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.
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...
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.
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?
Barbara Boxer

Bipartisanship on Water Projects in Senate Spurred by Freedom to Fish Act

The senior energy aide to Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader from the coal state of Kentucky, was praised last week by one of the Senate’s top environmentalists, Environment and Public Works Chairwoman Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. The compliment seems unusual amid the hyper-partisanship that’s now the norm in Washington, but when put into context it makes sense.
tmobile legere

Good-Bye, MetroPCS: Only Verizon Now Opposes Net Neutrality

Now Verizon is the only remaining petitioner in the case.
Alan Greenspan Receives Honorary Harvard Degree, 1999

So, a Fed Chairman Is Speaking at Your Graduation

"The future of the country is in jeopardy." It's what every college graduate wants to hear while sitting up on that stage, sweltering in the spring heat with friends and family watching.
Julius Genachowski

The Former Head of the FCC Is Now on Twitter

Julius Genachowski may no longer be a public servant. But that doesn't mean he's out of the public eye.
Heart Monitor

Are Recessions Good for Your Health?

With the recovery underway, things are starting to look up. Consumer confidence rose to a six-year high on Friday, the housing sector is improving, the economic gears are turning. But there may also be a less-welcome rebound: fatalities could rise.
Eric Holder

You Know What Really Risks National Security? Leak Investigations.

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

How Republicans Will Try to Pin the IRS Scandal on Obama

They plan to connect the dots between the agency's chief counsel and the White House.
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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.
Don't Tread on Me Flag

Tea Party Victims Detail Intimidation, Claim Vindication

The tax collector's actions confirm the worst fears of conservatives.
Bank of America

Where Are We on Too Big to Fail?

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Inside the Cover: Why You Won’t Own Your Road

In this week's National Journal cover story, a look at how private companies are stepping in to fill the gaps in public projects, like highways, ports — even space-flight facilities.  
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.
Watergate Committee hearings

Watergate: When Congress Worked

The back-stabbing, press-leaking, hyper-partisan members of the committee investigating Nixon, which began hearings 40 years ago, still made history. Here’s how. 
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. 
Barack Obama

How the Scandals Turned Obama Into a Dour Scold

The Benghazi and IRS affairs have robbed the president of his trademark optimism. 
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. 
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. 

Poll: How Damaging Is the IRS Controversy to Obama?

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

Poll: Will the Benghazi Controversy Hurt a Possible Presidential Run by Hillary Clinton?

Says one Republican, "The 3 a.m. call came, and she was sleeping. Not a stellar example of leadership."
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. 
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.
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.
nixon ob

Play of the Day: Is Obama Nixonian?

On the anniversary of the Watergate hearings, late-night comedy examines the triumvirate of White House scandals.  
Obama and the umbrella

Here's Friday's Front-Page Photo of Obama

President asks Marines to hold umbrella over him and Turkish prime minister as they address the press.
Obama Rain

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

The president's Rose Garden press conference.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.”
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.
Michele Bachmann

Bachmann Airing Ads On Minnesota TV

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., has purchased TV advertising time for the next two weeks with a Minneapolis station, according to filings with the Federal Communications Commission. Beginning Thursday, Bachmann's campaign will air 31 30-second spots on KMSP, a local Fox affiliate, for $14,565 over...
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. 
Mike Rogers

Feinstein: Rogers a 'Respected' Contender for FBI

The Obama administration is considering House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., for the top job at the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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.

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.
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.
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.
Eric Holder on Trayvon Martin

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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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