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National Journal Coverage
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.
Immigration rally

First Hurdle Cleared in Immigration, but Bigger Ones Remain

The Senate Judiciary Committee approves a bill that would give 11 million undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship and require employers to electronically verify all new hires.
IRS-Steven Miller

IRS Scandal: The 8 Names to Know This Week

The controversy surrounding the IRS’s targeting of tea-party groups will consume Capitol Hill for a second straight week. These are the key names to know to keep up with the fast-moving scandal, with hearings set Tuesday in the Senate and Wednesday in the House.
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.
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.
play of day thumb

Play of the Day: The Salad of Obama Scandals

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

The Importance of Being Orrin

Immigration-reform advocates desperately hope to win over Hatch, the senior senator from Utah. For now, he’s playing coy. 
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.
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.
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.
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. 

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.
Eric Holder

Eric Holder in the Hot Seat as Congress Probes Scandals

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

Senate Agriculture Committee Plows Forward on Farm Bill

The Senate Agriculture Committee on Tuesday approved a five-year farm bill that reveals a new consensus on crop and nutrition policy, but it emerged over the objections of three Republican senators from the Plains—Pat Roberts of Kansas, Mike Johanns of Nebraska, and John Thune of South Dakota—who offered amendments on food stamps and commodities that a majority of the panel rejected.
Bart Stupak

Bipartisanship, Wolverine State-Style

Who says bipartisanship is dead? Not GOP Rep. Fred Upton or former Rep. Bart Stupak. Upton raised almost half a million dollars last quarter, the largest haul in the Michigan delegation. Nestled amid the political action committees and industry bigwigs who donated to Upton earlier this year is a $50...
Democrats in Triage Mode

Democrats in Triage Mode on White House Scandals

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

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

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

How Many House Committees Are Currently Probing the Obama Administration?

A look at which House committees have inquiries into Obama Administration issues
farm- drought- farm bill

Graphic: Five Things to Watch in the Farm Bill

This week, the Senate and House Agriculture committees will each mark up a new five-year farm bill that would cover farm and nutrition policy through 2018. The Senate markup will be Tuesday,and the House’s markup will be the next day. Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., proposes to cut $23 billion over 10 years from a bill that costs close to $1 trillion, while House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, R-Okla., proposes to cut almost $40 billion.
U.S tax forms 1040 and W2.

5 Questions About That Obama IRS Mess

Here's what you need to know about the alleged targeting of conservative groups' tax status.
Business Education

House to Tackle Student-Loan Rates

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

Congress Poised to Move on Farm Bill

The atmosphere on Capitol Hill for the farm bill suddenly seems to be full speed ahead.
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. 
US Mexico Border

The Border Hawks Have Already Won

The Senate immigration bill already addresses hard-liner concerns, which means they’ll have less reason to oppose the final product. 
Barack Obama,  Laura Chinchilla

Why Mexico Will Always Play Second Fiddle

Like all presidents, Barack Obama says he wants a better relationship with his neighbors to the south. Then events get in the way. 
Joe Lieberman

GOP Leans on Lieberman in Boston Probe

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

Overhauling the Tax Code With 'Max and Dave'

Max Baucus and Dave Camp, Congress's top tax-writers, are taking their message to the Internet in hopes of building public support for their efforts.
Gang of 8

Can Bipartisan Cooperation Save Us From Stalemate?

Polarization and the breakdown of the committee system have helped spawn the “Gang of Eight” and its cousins.
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.
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.
Joe Lieberman

Lieberman Backs GOP Line on Security Failures in Boston Marathon Attack

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

Benghazi: Incompetence, But No Cover-up

The hearings deepen the tragedy, but not the scandal.
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.
IMMIGRATION 508

Immigration Law May Be Tough on the Poor

Don’t expect Congress to dive too deeply into the politically unforgiving topic of how the United States treats poor people as it begins debating immigration legislation. But that question is always lurking beneath the surface.
Rand Paul and Ted Cruz

Who's More Conservative, Ted Cruz or Rand Paul?

They vote alike more often than not, but there are differences between the possible 2016 contenders.
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.
Eric Cantor

What’s Missing From the House Republican Agenda

The most interesting thing about this month’s House GOP agenda is what’s not on it: namely, immigration reform.
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.
Guantanamo detention facility at dawn

Political Barriers Stand Between Obama and Closing Guantanamo Facility

Little has changed politically since the last time Congress rebuffed the president.
Jack Kingston

Tea Party Hopes for a Peachy 2014 in Georgia

Three open House races and an open Senate seat make Georgia one of the nation’s best opportunities.
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.
Max Baucus

Lobbyists: Max Baucus' Retirement Isn't a Game Changer for Tax Reform

“I don’t think the landscape has changed because of Baucus’s announcement. He’s got 18 months to get it done, and he had 18 months to get it done before.”
Boston Inquiry

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

The House Homeland Security Committee plans to hold the first congressional hearing next week examining the Boston Marathon terrorist attack and what it says about the state of the nation’s post-Sept. 11 security infrastructure.
Landrieu 2012 photo

What the Energy Panel Would Look Like Under Chairwoman Landrieu

If Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., takes over the gavel of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee next Congress, she is in a prime spot to lead on an issue that’s critically important to her state.
Linda Bloss-Baum

Bloss-Baum Pushes for Artists' Rights in Her New Public-Affairs Firm

As lawmakers mulled legislation to safeguard the rights of performing artists in 2010, two musicians sat in the office of then-Rep. Charlie Gonzalez, D-Texas, hopeful that he would support the bill.
John Larson

Connecticut Lawmakers Back 'Coltsville' Park at Firearms Site Near Newtown

Members of Connecticut’s congressional delegation are supporting a plan to create a national park out of the historic Colt firearms manufacturing plant in Hartford, just 50 miles from the site of the Newtown shooting.
Senate Immigration

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

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

Landrieu Primed to Lead Energy Panel – If She Wins Reelection

A domino effect prompted by Max Baucus’s coming retirement leaves her poised to chair what is arguably the most important committee to energy-rich Louisiana.
FAA, Airport

FAA Furloughs to End, but Who Is to Blame for All the Flight Delays?

The House gave final approval Friday to a bill designed to end the furloughs of air-traffic controllers, but not before a partisan floor fight over who is to blame for the thousands of flight delays this week.
yucca mountain

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

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

How Republicans Can Win Over Their Party on Immigration

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

For House Republicans, It’s Fiscal First

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

Get Ready To Be Taxed on Internet Purchases

The Senate is scheduled to debate the Internet sales-tax legislation this week. The bill is expected to pass.
Sources of Energy Graphic

Hydropower Bills Enjoy Bipartisan Support in Congress

With a pair of bills on hydropower, lawmakers are reviving two pieces of conventional wisdom long forgotten in gridlocked Washington: Energy issues tend to be more geographical than ideological, and Republicans can (and do) support renewable energy.
Sen. Bob Corker

Bob Corker Charts Leadership Course

Sen. Bob Corker's independent voice on high-profile issues and scholarly devotion to studying policies he is interested in have made GOP leaders take notice of him and want to keep the Tennessee Republican close at hand — both to capitalize on his expertise and to watch his moves.
Somalian immigrant becomes a U.S. citizen

How Immigration Opponents Are Trying to Use the Boston Bombings to Delay Reform

Democrats, Gang of Eight members, are playing offense to prevent delays.
Goodlatte

Immigration Debate May Grow More Complicated

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

Let’s Not Talk About Climate Change

Louisiana’s two senators worry more about oil than the rising water level.
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.
Amy Smith

Saved From Boston's Bombs by a Text Message

Veteran Capitol Hill staffer Amy Smith starts a new job on Friday, feeling lucky to be alive after narrowly escaping Monday's devastation near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
Dave McCarthy

David McCarthy, Majority Chief Counsel, Environment and Economy Subcommittee

David McCarthy is chief counsel for the majority on the Energy and Commerce Environment and Economy Subcommittee.
041813_PB_jurisdictionPromo.png

Energy and Commerce's Jurisdiction: Anything that Moves, Burns, or is Sold

That is how National Journal once described the jurisdiction of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. House rules offer one definition of the committee’s turf, but a practical, bottom-up view of the committee’s territory is visible in the word cloud below. It shows the terms most common to the titles of the almost 350 hearings held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee and its subcommittees in the 111th and 112th Congresses. The larger the word, the more frequently it appeared in those hearing titles.
Karen Lightfoot

Karen Lightfoot, Minority Communications Director

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

Alexa Marrero, Majority Deputy Staff Director

Alexa Marrero blends her former gig as the committee’s communications director with that of her more strategic role as deputy staff director, a position she took on in July 2012.
Greg Dotson

Greg Dotson, Minority Staff Director, Energy and Environment Subcommittee

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

John Gibson Mullan, Chief Majority Counsel, Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade

John Gibson Mullan’s broad experience serves him well as chief counsel for Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade, which has jurisdiction so far-ranging it covers everything from sports to time zones.
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.
Roger Sherman

Roger Sherman, Minority Chief Counsel

Roger Sherman started working for Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., as his defense and foreign-affairs staffer back in 1990—one week before the first Gulf War started.
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.
Barack Obama_Ron Kirk_Michael Froman

U.S. and E.U. Will Gnaw on Trade Agreement

Late last month, the White House notified Congress that it planned to begin negotiating a comprehensive trade and investment agreement with the European Union. Talks on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership are expected to begin in June—and that’s when the House Energy and Commerce Committee will step up its involvement.
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.
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.
418Keystone-protest_AP

Keystone XL Pipeline Channels Partisan Attacks

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

Natural gas well

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

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

Time Looks Right for Permanent ‘Doc Fix’

Since 1997, when Congress passed legislation with the dreaded “sustainable growth rate” formula, the problem of how to compensate doctors who treat Medicare patients has been a perennial issue before the House Energy and Commerce Committee and Congress as a whole.
capitol

How Can Congress Help Manufacturers?

The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade kicked off 2013 with a focus on its middle name. It’s fitting. After all, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., who chairs the committee, changed the subcommittee name when he took over in 2011 to include an explicit reference to manufacturing.
Lisa Jackson

Waiting for a Clash on Climate Change

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

5 Things Immigration, Gay Marriage, and Gun Control Have That Climate Change Doesn't

The amount of change happening in Washington is impressive, but this kind of sea change can’t happen right now with energy and climate policy. Here's why.
041813_PB_upton50.jpg

The 50 Insiders Who Know Fred Upton Best

Meet the 50 people inside the beltway closest to Upton. The list includes two former and one current Cabinet official, a handful of mostly telecommunications lobbyists, several current and former senior staffers, a Fox journalist and a smattering of other people from many walks of the Washington political life.
Rep. Fred Upton

A Polarized Congress Tests Fred Upton’s Instincts

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

The Art and Agony of Oversight

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

Ricin Letter Adds To Anxiety on the Hill

Amid an already edgy state of alert in Washington following Monday’s bombings at the Boston Marathon, law enforcement officials confirmed on Tuesday that they were also investigating whether an envelope containing the poison ricin was intended to harm Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss.
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.
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.
bob goodlatte

Forget Working Groups, House Judiciary Moving Immigration on its Own

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., isn’t interested in waiting on immigration.
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.
Ralph Nader

Ralph Nader’s Newest Crusade: Raising the Minimum Wage

Consumer advocate Ralph Nader has a new crusade for 2013—raising the federal minimum wage from $7.25 an hour, where it has stagnated since President Obama took office in 2009.
Pat Toomey

House GOP Shrugs Off Senate Progress on Guns

In the four months since Newtown, conservative House Republicans have made a consistent case against passing any new gun-related laws.
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.
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.
bob goodlatte

The House Member Who Can Change the Internet

Often overlooked on tech issues, Rep. Bob Goodlatte has a quiet approach that masks his power.
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.
Thad Cochran

Food Stamps Are Key Component to Getting Farm Bill Passed

Senate Agriculture Committee ranking member Thad Cochran, R-Miss., defended federal nutrition programs Tuesday to a group of agricultural journalists, and in the process demonstrated why dealing with food stamps may be harder this year than in 2012 when it comes to writing a farm bill.
Rep. Greg Walden R.-Ore.

Is the GOP Preparing to Attack Dems on Social Security?

Are Republicans preparing to cudgel Democrats with, of all things, Social Security? That was the explicit impression left by Greg Walden, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, during a Wednesday interview on CNN. The Oregon congressman said President Obama's budget – which...
Budget

What to Expect in Obama’s Budget

Apart from the president’s plan to formalize cuts that he has already proposed, what else can Americans expect from a budget that’s roughly two months late and that follows both parties’ congressional budget proposals?
Harry Reid

For Congress, A Rare Break From Fiscal Crises

Though the delivery of the president’s budget will keep numbers in the news this week, lawmakers return to Washington from a recess for the first time this year without a fiscal crisis bearing down on them.
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.
Ernest Moniz, Obama's Reported Pick to Head the Energy Department

Sen. Wyden to Grill Obama's Energy Nominee on Nuclear-Waste Site

On Tuesday, Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ernest Moniz, President Obama’s nominee for Energy secretary, are going to square off like it’s 1998.
Barack Obama

Obama Budget Vs. March Jobs Report: Timing is No Coincidence

The budget proposal provides stiff competition to the bad news on employment and could turn out to be far more significant to the fate of the nation than the March jobs report.
Shush

When Corporations Are Hacked, Who Should Know?

Companies hurt themselves—but help the rest of us—when they disclose cyberattacks. 
Asa Huchinson

Republicans Pushing For More Aggressive Enforcement of Current Gun Laws, Not New Gun Control

Republicans are aiming to shift the media’s focus from the prospects of new gun laws to the failures of current ones.
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.
Bob Corker

Sequestration Hurting Your Budget? It Didn't Stop a 13-Day Overseas Congressional Trip

Roughly 16 Senate Finance Committee staffers are wrapping up a whirlwind 13-day trip to Vietnam, Australia, and New Zealand, even as federal agencies have been forced by sequestration to limit employee travel and participation in out-of-town conferences.
Arkansas Oil Spill

Arkansas' Oil Spill Stirs Opposition to the Keystone Pipeline

The spill, outside Little Rock, Ark., serves as a stark reminder that energy production comes with unavoidable risks.
Dave Camp

Will Tax Reform See a Vote Anytime Soon?

Despite pledges by the key chairmen in the House and Senate to move on tax reform, action is unlikely this year—and may not come at all in the 113th Congress.
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.
Dave Camp

The House GOP's Strategy to Starve the Senate

A strategy by House Republican leaders to bottle up revenue bills until a comprehensive overhaul of the tax code is finished is being sold to GOP lawmakers as a tactical way to hobble Senate Democrats.
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?"
Waxman Upton

Ethanol Debate Has Glimpse of Bipartisanship

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

What Does It Mean to Be Conservative, Anyway?

Backing the Ryan budget might not be enough to prove your cred.
Jane Campbell

Five Small Business Committee Staffers to Know

Here are the people you need to know on the Small Business Committee staffs on both sides of the Capitol.
Caitlin Halligan

Halligan's Withdrawal Is a Victory for GOP and Gridlock

Obama loses the battle to get his pick onto a court considered an on-ramp to the Supreme Court.
stealth combat drone demonstrator Neuron

When the Whole World Has Drones

The precedents the U.S. has set for robotic warfare may have fearsome consequences as other countries catch up.
Hillary Clinton in Malawi

Hillary Clinton's Global Feminist Legacy

Her tenure at State may have lacked a bold diplomatic achievement. But posterity will remember her efforts to help women.

On the Move: March 23, 2013

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

Border Triggers Could Sink Immigration Deal

Republicans' insistence that border-security benchmarks be met before legalizing 11-12 million illegal immigrants could sink the emerging compromise measure.
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.
Rick Perry

The Man Who Could Turn Texas Blue: Rick Perry

By opposing Medicaid expansion, the governor could hurt the GOP in a must-win state.
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...
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.
Drones

Invasion of the Drones Has Senate Panel’s Attention

Like it or not, drones are coming to American skies. Now Congress must find a way to protect the right to privacy.
Kathleen Merrigan

Organic-Food Champion’s Departure From USDA Sows Seeds of Concern

Agriculture Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan’s upcoming departure has raised a lot of questions about the Obama administration’s commitment to organic and local food production, but she said in an exclusive interview Wednesday that it will have almost four more years to institutionalize the changes she has made at the department.
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.
Capitol Sunrise

Tiny Think Tank a Major Player on Energy Policy

Robbie Diamond has the name of a used-car salesman—and with his slick, shiny coif, ever-present white-toothed smile, and knack for self-promotion—he might even pass for one.

Ethics: Full Probes Into Reps. Rob Andrews, Don Young

The House Ethics Committee announced Tuesday it was opening full-scale investigations of two lawmakers, Rep. Rob Andrews, D-NJ, and Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, for the alleged use of official or campaign resources for personal purposes.

Berman Joins Covington; Ambassador Returns

Four new members have been appointed to the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, which provides grants to projects that increase public access to historical records.
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...
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.
Patty Murray

Chickening Out on Medicare

They agree the entitlement is in deep trouble. So why didn't pols cut as much as they could have?
Paul Ryan

There's New Hope for a Grand Bargain

Amid the hot air in Washington comes the whiff of compromise.
Bill Flores, Scott Garrett

The Rightward March of the Republicans

Republicans in Congress were supposed to moderate their message. It's not happening.
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.
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.
James Clapper

America's 3 Biggest Cybersecurity Vunerabilities

The Obama administration has put cyberattacks at the top of the list of global threats, and concerns are rising about at-risk infrastructure.
Capitol

After Snag, Senate Moving on Bill to Avert Shutdown

The Senate on Wednesday morning was opening its debate on a bill to keep government funded through Sept. 30, after Republicans dropped objections to proceeding.
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.
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.
Shutdown red light capitol

Deal in Sight to Keep the Government Open

The House appears willing to accept the Senate's proposal to keep the government funded for the rest of the fiscal year, avoiding a protracted fight that could lead to a government shutdown by the end of the month.

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.
Trent Franks

Electromagnetic Pulse Caucus Battles Skeptics in Push to Protect the Planet

A small but growing cadre of House members is set to relaunch efforts to protect the nation against what they say is a very real threat: the unleashing of an electromagnetic pulse either by a solar storm or a nuclear-armed foe that could cripple much of the nation’s electrical infrastructure.  
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.
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.
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.
Sen. Carl Levin

Carl Levin Not Running for Reelection

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., announced late on Thursday that he will not seek a seventh term in 2014, leaving Democrats with another open seat to defend next year. Levin called the decision "extremely difficult" and said he wanted to focus on his role as chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee "without the distraction of campaigning for re-election."
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.
Laura Richardson

Past Deadline, Laura Richardson Still Hasn’t Paid Her Ethics Fine

Laura Richardson has a troublesome new debt—this time with the ethics authorities.
Gov. Mike Beebe

The Obama Administration's Super-Expensive, Legally Dubious Medicaid Plan

Arkansas is a test case for a new privatization plan that could win support from GOP politicians in other states.
Bob Ney

Disgraced Ex-Congressman Attacks John Boehner in New Book

Imprisoned for his role in the Abramoff scandal, former Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio has some scores to settle.
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.
Eleanor Holmes Norton

Budget Cuts Come to Congress

While lawmakers enjoy the constitutionally protected luxury of not having to worry about their own pay or jobs being impacted by the sequester cuts they helped to impose, their staff, office expenses, and committee budgets have no such protection.
dolphin-pollution

EPA Funding Reductions Have Kneecapped Environmental Enforcement

Budget cuts have greatly diminished the EPA's ability to enforce environmental laws.
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.
Assault Rifle Ban

Gun-Control Advocates Began 2013 With Plenty of Momentum. Is It Fading?

For weeks, lawmakers have been consumed by debates over massive spending cuts and nomination fights. This is the last thing that gun-control advocates needed.
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.
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.
Rand Paul

Rand Paul Pledges to Hold Up Brennan’s CIA Nomination Until He Gets Answers on Drones

Sen. Rand Paul sees it as a very simple question, which could easily be answered with a “yes” or a “no”: Can the Obama administration authorize the use of lethal force—such as a drone strike—against a U.S. citizen on American soil?
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.
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.
Jacob Lew

Few Know Jack Lew's Views on Big Bank Laws As His Confirmation Moves Through Senate

So far, the Senate proceedings on President Obama’s nominee for Treasury secretary, Jacob Lew, have been surprisingly free of political fireworks, which could pave the way for a confirmation vote by the end of the week.
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.
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.

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.
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.
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.
jay rockefeller scrum

Rockefeller, Lead Senate Player on Cyber, Seeks To Win Over Business

A week after President Obama's groundbreaking executive order on cybersecurity, attention is turning to Congress, where Sen. Jay Rockefeller is reviving stalled legislation on the issue.
Former Rep. Alan Grayson

Liberals in House Hatch Plans to ‘Bust the Chops’ of GOP

Privately, the liberal Democrats behind an aggressive new legislative strategy targeting House Republicans are calling it “Operation Bust Their Chops.”
firing range

We'll Give You That Visa if We Can Keep Our Assault Weapons

House conservatives craft a message that allows them to get behind an immigration overhaul but block White House efforts to further regulate guns.
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.
Jacob Lew

Easy Ride Expected for Jack Lew at Confirmation Hearing

Jacob Lew is nothing if not prepared.
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