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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.
Catfish

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

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

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.
 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.
Gina McCarthy

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

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

Abortion Rights Activists Looking to Hillary Clinton As 2016 Champion

Abortion rights activists fuming over President Obama’s opposition to making emergency contraception accessible to women of all ages could have an ally campaigning for the Oval Office in 2016: Hillary Clinton.
Sky

Why Carbon Is So Hard to Regulate

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

After the Obama Administration's Morning-After Pill Decision

President Obama has made a series of speeches in recent weeks, delighting scientists who work on controversial areas of research and advocates for reproductive and abortion rights.
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.
Tom Wheeler FCC

6 Revealing Quotes From Obama's Potential New FCC Nominee, Tom Wheeler

The man who could be in line to head the Federal Communications Commission wrote prolifically about tech on his blog.
AT&T-T-Mobile merger logo

FCC Chair: Blocking the AT&T/T-Mobile Merger Was 'Absolutely the Right Call'

Julius Genachowski doesn’t regret killing the AT&T/T-Mobile merger one bit. 

Introducing National Journal's New Mobile App

National Journal has launched its new iPhone app, putting even more NJ features and tools at your fingertips. 
telephone operators, cell phone

Why We Need to Move Ahead on IP

When it comes to communications technology, federal regulations shouldn’t discourage innovation. They have to keep up with the times.
ajit pai hudson institute

The FCC's Republican Member

Ajit Pai is the sole remaining Republican on the Federal Communications Commission. 
West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion

How Will Texas Explosion Impact Chemical Security Laws?

Industry officials 'appalled' by those who say the incident suggests a need for tougher chemical security laws.
 Lake Borgne Barrier

Let’s Not Talk About Climate Change

Louisiana’s two senators worry more about oil than the rising water level.
Clay Alspach

Clay Alspach, Chief Majority Health Counsel

When two veteran committee health staffers departed this year, Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., picked one of his own to promote. Clay Alspach, 35, has worked for the committee, or its members, for much of his professional life.
Neil Fried

Neil Fried, Majority Chief Counsel, Communications and Technology Subcommittee

Neil Fried came to Washington without a shred of telecom experience. Now, he’s counted as one of the top tech-policy experts in government—so much so that he was considered for chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, according to industry analysts.
Phil Barnett

Phil Barnett, Minority Staff Director, Full Committee

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

Tom Hassenboehler, Chief Counsel, Energy and Power Subcommittee

When Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., hired Tom Hassenboehler in December 2012, it was a reunion of sorts for the 35-year-old policy expert.
Bottles of drugs

Health Care Interests Have Much to Monitor

Because entitlement reform could touch nearly every medical lobby, all will keep eyes and ears on the Energy and Commerce Committee’s doings.
INTERNET USAGE

Companies Fight Hard to Shape Internet Regs

It’s the closest thing the Internet has to a creation myth: The Web owes its usefulness today to decentralization, individual empowerment, and noninterference from the corporate and government classes. For the Internet to remain an innovative place, tech-policy types argue, this libertarian culture must continue.
Ethanol

Renewable-Fuels Standard Gets Bipartisan Attention

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

A Polarized Committee Reflects a Gridlocked Congress

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

No Big Bills, But Plenty of Action on Health Care

The Energy and Commerce Committee won’t be passing any blockbuster health care bills this session—much as some GOP members would still love to repeal the Affordable Care Act—but several smaller measures on the agenda are likely to make it to the House floor.
Julius Genachowski

Committee Will Watch Spectrum Auction Closely

By definition, virtually every wireless technology in use today depends on radio waves. Whether it’s for Wi-Fi, cell-phone calls, or satellite TV, the radio spectrum transports signals from source to destination quickly and efficiently.
Antenna broadcasts spectrum

Companies Fight to Influence Auction Rules

On spectrum issues, wireless carriers and cable companies account for the most active lobbying. The top three are AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast, followed by trade groups such as the National Cable and Telecommunications Association.
Person uses computer screen

Internet Regulation Tests Bipartisanship

  When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Dozens of countries, including the United States, refused to sign the final international treaty.

Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy. It’s one of those rare moments at which Democrats and Republicans find themselves in alliance based on their respective beliefs, rather than out of political expediency. Democrats see the issue as mainly about civil liberties; for the GOP, it’s about blocking government overreach. When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy.   

100113_agriculture_496w.jpg

Long List of Lobbies Oppose Renewable-Fuels Standard

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

Waiting for a Clash on Climate Change

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

Utilities, Enviros Tracking New Rules

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

The 218 Year History of the House Energy and Commerce Committee

Historical highlights of the oldest standing legislative committee in the House of Representatives
Rep. Fred Upton

A Polarized Congress Tests Fred Upton’s Instincts

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

Crowdfunding Everything From Solar Panels to Veronica Mars

A growing number of online companies help connect entrepreneurs and borrowers with investors and donors.
Fred Upton

House Energy Committee’s Redux Agenda

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

Slow-Motion Gun Battle Plays Out in Senate

Lawmakers will stage some slow-going drama this week as the Senate proceeds in its deliberations on gun-control legislation with a series of votes on amendments—many of them likely to usher in their own mini-floor fights, or even filibusters.
Gina McCarthy

Why Obama's Environmental Pick Drives Some Republicans Crazy

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

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

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

The Man Who Could Put Climate Change on the Agenda

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

Mary Schapiro and Lanny Breuer Give Us the Ultimate Dog-Bites-Man Story

They failed to prosecute a single Wall Streeter over the 2008 disaster. Now it's home to mama.
Gas station

EPA Finds Sweet Spot to Release Controversial Gas Rule

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

Could Chuck Schumer Be Well-Set to Chair Senate Banking Committee?

The departure of Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson after 2014 could set off a future chain of musical chairmanships. One of the leading contenders for the influential post is the chamber’s No. 3-ranking Democrat,  Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York. Could the "senator from Wall Street" become the "chairman from Wall Street?"
Lisa Murkowski and Ron Wyden

Five Easy Pieces of Energy Legislation

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

Memorable Moments From a Departing Telecom Regulator

Robert McDowell, one of two Republican members of the FCC, said Wednesday he plans to step down.
Fred Upton

Upton, Waxman Launch Debate on Biofuels Mandate

For the first time since President Obama won the White House in 2008, the top Republican and Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee are working collaboratively on a controversial piece of energy policy: the renewable-fuels standard.
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.
Keystone XL Pipeline

Why the White House Loves Natural Gas

While green groups protest outside, the president huddles inside the White House with oil and gas executives.
Derek Khanna

Freedom for Phones — and Their Owners

Derek Khanna, pushed out of his job as a GOP researcher, led the drive to make it legal to unlock your mobile device.
Lean In Women

The Washington Women Who Leaned In When Sheryl Sandberg Didn't

They may not get the publicity, but these women have been ahead of Sandberg in leaning in against the most chauvinistic industry in America: Wall Street.
Josh Sheinkman

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

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

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

People may not be able to breathe in Beijing, but its politicians are doing more than U.S. lawmakers are to slow global warming.
Gas prices

New EPA Gasoline Rule Could Raise Prices and Spark Political Pushback

A controversial regulation from the Obama administration that might increase already-high gas prices is sure to prompt GOP pushback.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid tours a Nevada solar plant in 2010.

Harry Reid: The Closet Environmentalist

He doesn’t tout it, but the Senate majority leader is one of the greenest members of Congress.
Obama Cabinet Meeting

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

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

Republicans Take Aim at Obama’s EPA Nominee

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

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

Gina McCarthy, President Obama’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, has been called the president's "green quarterback." But she also has a reputation as a political pragmatist who works well with industry and listens to concerns. If confirmed she will become the face of Obama’s sweeping ambitions to tackle climate change as a legacy issue and will write rules to force the coal industry to change its ways. 
Gina McCarthy Paddles Kayak to Shore in 2007

4 Things to Know About Gina McCarthy, Obama's Pick to Head EPA

President Obama on Monday announced his selection of Gina McCarthy, the Environmental Protection Agency’s assistant administrator for the Office of Air and Radiation. Here are a few things you should know about McCarthy.

What's On the Chopping Block in Energy & Environment Policy?

As the sequester's across-the-board cuts go into effect and Washington stares down a month's end deadline to pass legislation to keep the government running, what's at stake for energy and environment policy?
Sandy Potomac river flooding

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

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

EPA Funding Reductions Have Kneecapped Environmental Enforcement

Budget cuts have greatly diminished the EPA's ability to enforce environmental laws.
Sen. Rand Paul

Rand Paul: 'We Shouldn't Be Crisscrossing the Skies With Drones'

The senator is concerned about the administration's use of drones for surveillance—and targeted killing—in the U.S.
police tape

How an Obscure 911 Tax Could Have You Paying for Washington's Budget Cuts

With the countdown to a massive federal budget cut ticking away, top-level agencies everywhere are bracing for bad news. But they're not the only ones: the sequester puts many state budgets at risk, too. 
Superstorm Sandy House

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

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

On the Move

Angela Rye launches a new lobby shop, Impact Strategies. Domingo Herraiz is Motorola's new VP of North American government affairs. Campaign insider Tharon Johnson joins McKenna Long & Aldridge.
Barbara Boxer

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

Environment and Public Works Chairwoman Sen. Barbara Boxer is mounting a relentless defense of Obama’s global-warming rules.
cell phone inventor Martin Cooper

5 Inventors of the Cell Phone Honored for Wiring the World

On April 3, 1973, in New York City, Motorola engineer Martin Cooper made the first call on a cell phone. Hoisting a 2.2-pound device, the 44-year-old called his rival at Bell Laboratories to gloat.
Votes

Key Votes Used to Calculate the Ratings

The 116 Senate votes and 116 House votes on which National Journal’s 2012 vote ratings are based.
Obama SOTU

Why Obama Went Big on Climate Change

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

Why Some Privacy Advocates Are Grinning Over Obama's Cybersecurity Order

The five principles in the presidential directive that uphold civil liberties.
Obama SOTU

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

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

Obama Cites Storms, Drought to Build Case For Climate Action

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

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

Everything you need to know from 2013's State of the Union address, from health care and the budget to immigration and guns.
NRG Energy's W.A. Parish Electric Generating Station

Obama Begins New Push on Climate Agenda

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

Sizing Up Obama's State of the Union Address

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

Watchdog Finds Well-Oiled Revolving Door Linking SEC and Industry

Former SEC employees routinely helped companies overseen by the securities regulator to influence rulemaking, soften enforcement actions, and secure exemptions from federal law, according to a report that will be released Monday by the Project On Government Oversight.
Nemo

The Scary Truth About How Much Climate Change is Costing You

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

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

Policy in these areas is taking a back seat to just about everything else on Capitol Hill these days.
S&P

The S&P Lawsuit: The Empire Strikes Back ... Sort Of

The Justice Department’s lawsuit against the Standard & Poor’s ratings agency, announced Tuesday, may be overdue but at least it is happening.

Future Travelers

Who knows what the kids are going to come up with next? Some of them think owning a car is a big bother and would rather rent or borrow one. Others don't even have a driver's license! Their smart phones are an extension of their brains, which makes grown-ups cringe when they get behind the wheel. Still, all that connectivity has tantalizing possibilities for modernizing how people get from place to place.

Gasoline Rule Emerges From Election-Year Obscurity

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

Who Is Mary Jo White, Obama's Choice for Top Wall Street Cop?

The president nominates an outsider with an insider past to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Mary Jo White Reacts at a 1998 News Conference

Obama Signals Tougher Approach on Wall Street with SEC Pick

President Obama was accused by liberal critics of coddling Wall Street during his first term. His pick of Mary Jo White to head the Securities and Exchange Commission is a signal that he is ready to take a more confrontational approach toward the financial industry. The timing of the SEC selection—coming three days after his inaugural address in which he championed a progressive agenda and a willingness to fight for it—underscores that message.
Mary Jo White

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

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

Democratic Senators Pass Torch to EPA on Climate Change

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

How Obama Can Tackle Climate Change Without Congress

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

What Obama Wants and What Congress Will Give Him

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

Previewing the Sunday Shows

The Sunday shows will preview President Obama's second term this week on the eve of the inauguration. White House adviser David Plouffe will appear on Face the Nation, This Week, Fox News Sunday and State of the Union to discuss the challenges ahead in Obama's second term. Meet the Press will host...
Mary Jo White Reacts at a 1998 News Conference

The High-Profile Cases of Mary Jo White, Obama's SEC Pick

You've probably heard of some of Mary Jo White's clients--as well as those she prosecuted.
Ken Salazar

Obama Could Look West to Fill Interior Job

President Obama could look west to fill the job of Interior secretary that will become vacant in March with the departure of Ken Salazar. Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire, who supports the president’s progressive clean-energy and climate-change agenda, is one possible candidate. 
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.
Trucking pollution

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

How President Obama could clean up carbon emissions—alone.
Richard Nixon and Watergate

What Would Richard Nixon Say to Today's Republican Party?

The disgraced former president, born 100 years ago Wednesday, was a perpetual comeback artist who's still not done being reinvented.
Wall Street

Is Jack Lew A Friend to Wall Street?

Like Tim Geithner, the new Treasury nominee may owe his views to Robert Rubin. So don't expect him to pursue much in the way of bank reform.
Sun on the capitol dome

Five Sleeper Issues Washington Could Face in 2013

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

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

If the United States ever enacts a major climate-change law, it will owe a debt to Arnold Schwarzenegger.
White House

Cliff Diving Would Pose Dangers For Obama's 2nd-Term Agenda

If Washington plunges off the fiscal cliff on New Year’s Day, President Obama will have a strong hand to play in the fight over expiring tax cuts and automatic spending reductions set to hit the economy, but a drawn-out standoff could also wreak havoc on his ability to tackle big second-term agenda items such as tax reform, immigration and gun control.

Who Will Succeed Jackson as EPA Head?

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

Lisa Jackson Stepping Down as EPA Head

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

Heitkamp to be Key Energy Voice Among Moderate Democrats

Heidi Heitkamp—the Democrat who surprised everyone and beat her Republican challenger Rick Berg to win the North Dakota Senate seat in this year’s election—will be an important leader in a growing group of moderate Democratic senators hailing from energy-rich states.

EPA Scrambles on Year-End Regulatory Push

Forget the fiscal cliff and the National Rifle Association. The Environmental Protection Agency really went back to business on Friday after an election-year bottleneck. It unleashed two new regulations and a controversial report on oil and natural-gas drilling.

What's at Stake for Energy, Environment in Fiscal Cliff?

What are the risks and potential opportunities for energy and environment issues as Washington debates a way to avoid the fiscal cliff?
U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu

Obama’s Weak Bench

The president's wary of telling his story on fossil-fuel production, and his highest-profile surrogates on energy policy are not great messengers. 
Canola

Hot Ticket

On the agenda this week: Talking natural gas at the Newseum, artsy cocktails at the Corcoran, and a new film on black Republicans.
KING KONG VS. GODZILLA

The New Goliaths

The health care reform law, which was designed to lower costs, could end up raising them instead. The law is triggering a wave of hospital mergers and acquisitions, and decades of data show that hospital consolidations almost always lead to higher prices for patients.
Pills move through a precision weighing machine

Lipitor Fights Back

Pfizer’s strategy to fend off competition from generics may be paving a path for the pharmaceutical industry.
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