NJ Topics Inauguration

National Journal Coverage
Aretha Franklin

The Inauguration? Meh.

The first time was special. Four years later, Barack Obama is a politician who represents "continuity and an unrealized dream."

Inaugural Short on Olive Branches

TOP FIVE NEWS STORIES
Obama Lincoln

Obama's Inaugural: With Malice or None?

Understandable as it may be for Obama to govern with a chip on his shoulder, it's not his path to greatness.
Play of the Day! 1-23-13

The Inauguration Was Great and All, but Where Was the Hopelessness?

Most late-night shows were bumped for Inauguration Day on Monday, but they got their chance last night to get in some jokes on everything from Malia Obama photo-bombing her parents, to the lack of hopelessness in President Obama's speech, to the first couple's stiff inaugural ball dancing.  Wi...
Obama Swears

The Second-Term Inaugural Jinx

It's rare for a re-elected president to deliver a memorable inaugural address.
Inauguration

5 Ways This Obama Inauguration Will Be Different

President Obama’s inauguration as the first African-American president drew 1.8 million people to the National Mall—some of whom flew across the country and the world to be in D.C. for Obama’s big day. Here are five ways this inauguration will be different.
Inauguration day at the Capitol

Politics Doesn't Stop on Inauguration Day

It's tradition for officials to put politics aside. Tradition, but not reality.
Inaugural Platform Construction

A First Look at the Inaugural Platform

At least one thing in Washington is coming in on schedule and under budget this week: the inaugural platform on the Capitol's West Front.
Nixon and a bird

President Nixon Murdered Pigeons and Other Inauguration Facts

It would appear to be an unmatchable record. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was sworn in as president four times. But this year President Obama will tie it.

John Legend's Inauguration Weekend Plans

The country may go over the fiscal cliff, and the Mayans could be right, but you should still start making your inauguration weekend plans just in case we all make it to January.
Podcast Thumbnail

Can Obama Go It Alone After His Inaugural Address?

On this week's podcast: How successful will President Obama's new lobbying organization be at pushing through the progressive agenda unveiled during the Inaugural Address? Also, Inauguration Day historian Jim Bendat shares some quirky inaugural stories.
Play of the Day! 1-22-13

Designing Women, Fruit Ninja, Ranch Dressing: Mitt Romney's Inauguration Day

Most of the late-night shows were off the air Monday night because of Inauguration Day. But Stephen Colbert pointed out the hypocrisy at taking a day off because of a fake celebration. "Everybody was obsessed with something they kept calling 'The Second Inauguration of Barack Obama.' " Colbert whi...
LINCOLN'S second inauguration

This New York Times Reporter Was NOT IMPRESSED With Lincoln’s Second Inaugural

With mud, crowds, and a drunk vice president, Lincoln's speech was really the only redeeming part of the day (provided that you could hear it).
Obama gives Inauguration speech at the Capitol

Chastened by His Times, Obama Falls Short of History in Inaugural Address

“We cannot mistake absolutism for principle," Obama tells both allies and rivals.
Inauguration Preparation

D.C. Prepares for Barack Obama's Second Inaugural (Photos)

Full Text of President Barack Obama's Second Inaugural Address

President Obama's speech given on January 21, 2013, at the U.S. Capitol.
Clinton -- inaug

Historic Inauguration Images: Lincoln, Suffragists, Missiles, Michael Jackson, and More!

Grand pageants surrounding the oath of office are nothing new.
Inauguration Planning Map

Behind the Scenes of the 57th Presidential Inauguration

Organizers are ramping up security and ceremony planning for inauguration weekend, when President Barack Obama will be sworn in to his second term in office.
Obama

First Business After Inauguration: Immigration

President Obama is pressuring lawmakers to complete work on immigration next year. If they were starting from scratch, such a major endeavor would seem impossible. But under the Obama administration’s vision, it is more than doable because he is simply picking up the conversation where it left off in 2007, when an massive immigration bill died on the Senate floor.
Obama

Immigration First Up After Inauguration

President Obama is pressuring lawmakers to complete work on immigration next year. If they were starting from scratch, such a major endeavor would seem impossible. But under the Obama administration’s vision, it is more than doable because he is simply picking up the conversation where it left off in 2007, when an massive immigration bill died on the Senate floor.
Obama Swearing In at Inauguration with Bible

What Do Inauguration Poet, Biden Oath-Giver Have in Common?

Many people of color will be involved in the inaugural festivities, from a famed civil-rights pioneer to an activist actress.

Inauguration Committee Inaugurates Social Media Page

So far, the committee's Facebook page has 17 "likes." 
Richard Blanco, 2013 inauguration poet

The Inaugural Poet—a Gay Cuban-American Named After Nixon—Finds Inspiration in His Identity

Like President Obama, poet Richard Blanco has been tormented by questions of race and identity.

Buildup for Inauguration Begins at the Capitol

Weeks before one of them is tapped by voters as the next president, the stage is being set for Barack Obama or Mitt Romney to take the oath of office at the Capitol in January.

Report: Romney Sells Access to 'Presidential Inauguration Retreat'

For $50,000, Mitt Romney is offering top donors access to a “Presidential Inaugural retreat,” among other treats that come with a joint fundraising committee called "Romney Victory," reports BuzzFeed.

John F. Kennedy Inaugural Address

Vice President Johnson, Mr. Speaker, Mr. Chief Justice, President Eisenhower, Vice President Nixon, President Truman, Reverend Clergy, fellow citizens: We observe today not a victory of party but a celebration of freedom--symbolizing an end as well as a beginning--signifying renewal as well as change. For I have sworn before you and Almighty God the same solemn oath our forbears prescribed nearly a century and three-quarters ago. The world is very different now. For man holds in his mortal hands the power to abolish all forms of human poverty and all forms of human life. And yet the same revolutionary beliefs for which our forebears fought are still at issue around the globe--the belief that the rights of man come not from the generosity of the state but from the hand of God. We dare not forget today that we are the heirs of that first revolution. Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans--born in this century, tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage--and unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed, and to which we are committed today at home and around the world. Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty. This much we pledge--and more. To those old allies whose cultural and spiritual origins we share, we pledge the loyalty of faithful friends. United there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures. Divided there is little we can do--for we dare not meet a powerful challenge at odds and split asunder. To those new states whom we welcome to the ranks of the free, we pledge our word that one form of colonial control shall not have passed away merely to be replaced by a far more iron tyranny. We shall not always expect to find them supporting our view. But we shall always hope to find them strongly supporting their own freedom--and to remember that, in the past, those who foolishly sought power by riding the back of the tiger ended up inside. To those people in the huts and villages of half the globe struggling to break the bonds of mass misery, we pledge our best efforts to help them help themselves, for whatever period is required--not because the communists may be doing it, not because we seek their votes, but because it is right. If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. To our sister republics south of our border, we offer a special pledge--to convert our good words into good deeds--in a new alliance for progress--to assist free men and free governments in casting off the chains of poverty. But this peaceful revolution of hope cannot become the prey of hostile powers. Let all our neighbors know that we shall join with them to oppose aggression or subversion anywhere in the Americas. And let every other power know that this Hemisphere intends to remain the master of its own house. To that world assembly of sovereign states, the United Nations, our last best hope in an age where the instruments of war have far outpaced the instruments of peace, we renew our pledge of support--to prevent it from becoming merely a forum for invective--to strengthen its shield of the new and the weak--and to enlarge the area in which its writ may run. Finally, to those nations who would make themselves our adversary, we offer not a pledge but a request: that both sides begin anew the quest for peace, before the dark powers of destruction unleashed by science engulf all humanity in planned or accidental self-destruction. We dare not tempt them with weakness. For only when our arms are sufficient beyond doubt can we be certain beyond doubt that they will never be employed. But neither can two great and powerful groups of nations take comfort from our present course--both sides overburdened by the cost of modern weapons, both rightly alarmed by the steady spread of the deadly atom, yet both racing to alter that uncertain balance of terror that stays the hand of mankind's final war. So let us begin anew--remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness, and sincerity is always subject to proof. Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate. Let both sides explore what problems unite us instead of belaboring those problems which divide us. Let both sides, for the first time, formulate serious and precise proposals for the inspection and control of arms--and bring the absolute power to destroy other nations under the absolute control of all nations. Let both sides seek to invoke the wonders of science instead of its terrors. Together let us explore the stars, conquer the deserts, eradicate disease, tap the ocean depths and encourage the arts and commerce. Let both sides unite to heed in all corners of the earth the command of Isaiah--to "undo the heavy burdens . . . (and) let the oppressed go free." And if a beachhead of cooperation may push back the jungle of suspicion, let both sides join in creating a new endeavor, not a new balance of power, but a new world of law, where the strong are just and the weak secure and the peace preserved. All this will not be finished in the first one hundred days. Nor will it be finished in the first one thousand days, nor in the life of this Administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime on this planet. But let us begin. In your hands, my fellow citizens, more than mine, will rest the final success or failure of our course. Since this country was founded, each generation of Americans has been summoned to give testimony to its national loyalty. The graves of young Americans who answered the call to service surround the globe. Now the trumpet summons us again--not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need--not as a call to battle, though embattled we are-- but a call to bear the burden of a long twilight struggle, year in and year out, "rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation"--a struggle against the common enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease and war itself. Can we forge against these enemies a grand and global alliance, North and South, East and West, that can assure a more fruitful life for all mankind? Will you join in that historic effort? In the long history of the world, only a few generations have been granted the role of defending freedom in its hour of maximum danger. I do not shrink from this responsibility--I welcome it. I do not believe that any of us would exchange places with any other people or any other generation. The energy, the faith, the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will light our country and all who serve it--and the glow from that fire can truly light the world. And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man. Finally, whether you are citizens of America or citizens of the world, ask of us here the same high standards of strength and sacrifice which we ask of you. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own.

Corporate Presence At Inauguration Is No Change

For all President-elect Barack Obama's pledges to keep moneyed interests at bay, big donors and prominent lobbyists have left their stamp on his inauguration.

Video: Inaugural Addresses from Kennedy to Obama

Watch video of inaugural addresses from President Kennedy to President Obama.

President Obama's Inaugural Address

(text from statement released prior to speech)
President Barack Obama makes his way onto the stage to deliver remarks at an event marking the 50th Anniversary of John F. Kennedy's inauguration January 20, 2011 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.

Obama Celebrates 50th Anniversary of JFK Inauguration

President Obama tonight hailed John F. Kennedy as a transcendent and visionary leader and an advocate of "idealism without illusion" whose truncated term in office set the stage for significant advances in nuclear disarmament, civil rights, and technology.

Inauguration Issue: Team Players

Texas loyalists who will play key roles in Bush's second term:

Inauguration Issue: Team Texas

When George W. Bush won his re-election bid last fall, two of his Texas imports to the campaign, ad creator Mark McKinnon and chief strategist Matthew Dowd, hurriedly posted signs at Bush-Cheney '04 headquarters as they returned home to Austin. "G.T.T," the notes said.
Obama's speech on Kennedy's 50th anniversary

GALLERY: Washington Commemorates the 50th Anniversary of JFK’s Inauguration

Members of the Kennedy family and a host of Washington heavyweights commemorated the 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy's inauguration on Thursday.

Inauguration Issue: A Tale Of Two Texans

If John F. Kerry were taking the presidential oath of office next week, Washington would be awash with comparisons to the last true son of Massachusetts to serve in the Oval Office, John F. Kennedy. Everything from the two men's roots and religion to their naval service and foreign-policy stances would be ripe for commentary and analysis.

Inauguration Issue: Give 'Em Hell, George?

At the beginning of his second term, the president of the United States is facing generation-shaping challenges on the world stage. Recent attacks on the homeland and the dictates of war have forced a massive reorganization of national security structures, including the entire intelligence apparatus. Difficult nation-building projects are draining U.S. resources and energies in the aftermath of recent conflicts, and a global threat persists from an enemy ideologically opposed to Western ideals of freedom and democracy. The president's doctrine for overcoming those threats remains controversial, and is often criticized both at home and abroad as overreaching.
Medea Benjamin

Who Is Medea Benjamin, and Why Is She So Good at Heckling Public Officials?

The cofounder of CODEPINK also has interrupted NRA speeches. 

All 5 Living Presidents Together at the George W. Bush Library

For a few hours Thursday, Dallas is the center of American presidential power.
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. 
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.
Barack Obama

How the Scandals Turned Obama Into a Dour Scold

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

The Myth of Presidential Leadership

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

The Myth of Presidential Leadership

It is past time to abandon selective history and wishful thinking, and realize the inherent limits of presidential power.
Park Geun-hye

What Makes a Lady 'Iron'?

Six things to know about Park Geun-hye, South Korea's tough first female president.
Mitt and Ann Romney

The Romneys Are Coming to Washington

Mitt Romney, who has sought to avoid the public spotlight since losing the presidential election and avoided the capital for Monday’s inauguration, is scheduled to be in Washington on Friday for a reception in honor of him and his wife, Ann.
Obama

Newly Engaged Obama Makes Slow, Uncertain Progress on Agenda

Deals are within reach on guns, immigration, and even deficit reduction.
Obama

Post-Partisan No More: Who Is the New Obama?

Obama's inaugural address buried the brand he rode to the White House. Will the new approach work? The GOP won't make it easy.
Wendy Greuel

Clinton Backs Greuel in L.A. Mayor's Race

Los Angeles mayoral hopeful Wendy Greuel on Monday became the latest beneficiary of Bill Clinton's five-year thank-you tour, when the former president endorsed her over another Democrat in the upcoming runoff election. Greuel, the city's controller, served as a senior advisor at the Department of Ho...
Bush family

When Presidents Gather, Let the Healing Begin

Obama joins the 4 living ex-presidents today at the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.
Obama, Boehner and Reid on Inauguration Day

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

Ouch! President Obama’s inaugural speech hit a raw nerve with House Speaker John Boehner. 
Obama SOTU

Stung By Media's Focus on Liberal Agenda, Obama Pivots Back to Economy

Job One for President Obama in his State of the Union address will be to convince Americans that his top priority is their jobs.
Elizabeth Alexander

How to Write Poetry for History

Elizabeth Alexander, who penned a poem for the 2009 inauguration ceremonies, talks about the role of poetry at inaugurations. 
A sign showing K Street. Photo taken on February 1st, 2006.

Washington Parties, K Street Pays

Inauguration Day in Washington is really just one big party, college graduation, and New Year’s Eve all rolled into one. And as anyone who’s ever picked up the tab knows, an open bar ain’t cheap. 
Michelle Obama Waves DSC_9823

Here's Who You Think Should Sit With the First Lady for Obama's Speech

We asked National Journal readers who they thought would get the coveted invite to the State of the Union address this year. Here are their suggestions.

House Delegation Plans Journey to Rome for Installation of Pope Francis

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

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...
Play of the Day! 1-18-13

Obama: Tyrant or 'King Gun Snatcher the Magnificent'?

King, tyrant, Constitution destroyer — President Obama was repeatedly called all of these names this week after announcing his proposed reforms on gun control.  "Tyrants don't have to fight that f*&$ing hard for Ohio," Jon Stewart said on The Daily Show. "The real debate for tyrants is,...

The Political Landscape Was Off Last Week, Will Move to Thursday Moving Forward

After a week off, National Journal's weekly podcast, The Political Landscape, is moving from its weekend release to a Thursday afternoon release. You can be sure to get all future episodes of The Political Landscape by subscribing on iTunes or Stitcher, or by filling out the form below and to the right ("Follow the Political Landscape") to have each new episode sent to your email inbox. As always, you can find every episode at this landing page.
Chris Christie

The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

Science, storms, and demographics are starting to change minds among the rank and file. 
Election 2012, Obama Speaks, Biden

Need Proof That Joe Biden Is Running for President? Look At His Staff.

The veep wants his boss’s job in 2016. For evidence, just look at the staff.
Play of the Day! 1-10-13

Welcome to Citadel, Idaho, Where Every Resident Must Hit a 'Man-Sized' Target at 100 Yards

While Jon Stewart weighed in on the gun-control debate on Tuesday night, Stephen Colbert addressed it last night by introducing his viewers to Citadel, a "walled and armed community with up to 7,000 families living on about 3,000 acres in the moutains of Idaho, not to be confused with the armed comm...
Obama

Dropping in the Polls, Obama Seeks to Rally the Grassroots

The president delivered a pep talk to supporters of his new advocacy group trying to lift a gridlock-defying agenda of immigration reform, gun control, and climate change.
Barack Obama

Obama's Army Outmaneuvered by the NRA

If Obama can't get background checks through Congress after his campaign-style blitz this week, it doesn't bode well for the president's advocacy shop.

We're All Part of The -0.1 Percent

Obama's bold agenda crashes against harsh reality with weak GDP number. America's possibilities are not as "limitless" as he says.

News Roundup: Boehner Learns Importance of Leadership Unity

Good morning, Alley readers. Here are the headlines.One of the lessons House Speaker John Boehner learned in the 112th Congress is the need for unity among the GOP's caucus leaders, The Hill writes.Redistricting helped House Republicans from losing more seats, Roll Call writes.The Capitol is getting ready for the inauguration. And Ezra Klein opines on the possibility of ending the filibuster in the Senate--hey, it could happen, is what he's saying.

Insiders Diverge on Obama's Second-Term Style

No surprises here: National Journal's Democratic and Republican Political Insiders had sharply diverging views of President Obama's newly unveiled my-way-or-the-highway style. While 9 out of ten Democratic Insiders said the confrontational posture would be useful in enacting the President's decidedly ambitious agenda, about the same number of Republican Insiders said it was unhelpful in forwarding his priorities. Both in his inauguration address and his first full press conference after winning re-election, Obama has made it clear that he expects congressional Republicans to play ball on his terms-markedly different from the conciliatory tone he adopted after arriving at the White House in 2009 or in the wake of the beating Democrats took in the 2010 midterms. Will President Obama's new confrontational style be helpful in enacting his agenda?   Democrats (109 votes) Republicans (99 votes) Very helpful 46% 2% Helpful 41% 11% Not helpful 13% 87%
Obama

What Obama Doesn't Get About Gender Inequality

Caring for children and other loved ones makes it harder for women (and some men) to keep up.
Chicago Skyline

A Look at Homicide Statistics in Obama’s Hometown of Chicago in 3 Charts

President Obama traveled back on Friday to Chicago, his hometown and a city where gun violence and a jump in the number of homicides has received national attention. In 2012, there were 506 homicides in the Windy City, a sharp rise from the 435 recorded in 2011. Chicago has a population that is only about a third the size of New York City, yet the number of homicides there is fast approaching that of the Big Apple.
Obama Wasserman Schultz

Democrats Grumbling About Obama Lobbying Shop

Even as Democrats relish President Obama’ second inauguration, some party leaders are worried about whether the campaign’s decision to form its own advocacy group will hamstring future generations of Democratic candidates.
Gay Marriage Protest

Gay Rights Groups Want Action, And They Expect Obama to Deliver

Gay-rights advocates have a long list of asks for the White House, and they expect Obama to deliver.  
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.
Unemployment in DC

Has Obama Done Enough for Black Americans?

For many, this is still a land of unequal opportunity. A history-making president may not be enough. 

Senate Press Gallery Vets Retiring

Senate Press Gallery veterans Wendy Oscarson and Jim Saris will hang up their Hill badges for good at the end of this year.
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.
Michael Rubio

How a Calif. Legislative Race Complicated DCCC Recruiting Efforts

State legislatures, home to innumerable ambitious politicians pondering their next moves, are fertile ground for congressional recruiting. But in California's Central Valley, the state Senate has diverted Democrats’ congressional talent pipeline. An unexpected vacancy enticed a prospective Democra...
Cat

Obama Plays Cat and Mouse With GOP on Gay Rights, Guns, Immigration, and Climate

The president is torturing his prey on issues that divide the GOP from the mainstream.
President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address

Forget Bipartisanship. It's Time to Get Dirty.

The Edge is National Journal's daily look at today in Washington -- and what's coming next. The email features analysis from NJ's top correspondents, the biggest stories of the day -- and always a few surprises. To subscribe, click here.

How Should Washington Address Climate Change?

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

Don't Give Up on Guns, Immigration, or a Debt Deal

It's unfair to accuse Obama and Congress of foot-dragging, and too soon to assume failure.
Afghans burn an effigy depicting U.S. President Barack Obama

Obama to World: Drop Dead

In a speech devoid of foreign commitments, the president tells the world to keep away.
Afghanistan

7 Pressing Foreign Policy Challenges for Obama’s 2nd Term

Now that President Obama's inaugural festivities are over, he will turn his attention to tackling gun control, immigration, climate change and a series of looming budget confrontations with Republicans. Obama and his aides hope that the winding down of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will help him maintain a focus on domestic priorities.
800-mile Trans-Alaska pipeline

3 Energy Pipelines That Could Shake Up Geopolitics

Three of the most volatile parts of the Middle East—Iran, Iraq and Israel—are the scene of oil and gas initiatives that could shake up geopolitics there and beyond. The efforts center on three energy pipelines, at least two of which seem likely to be built. 
Jim Messina

Obama's Liberal Goals Collide With 2014 Campaign Map

A tough mid-term election could be an awkward time to test-drive an outside advocacy group closely linked to the president.
Judd Franken

What Ashley Judd Could Learn From Al Franken

The actress is taking lessons from the Minnesotan's celebrity-campaign playbook. 
Rio Grande

Why Obama Should Let Bipartisan Group's Plan Go First

The president could be the biggest obstacle to a bill being passed, if he tries to claim too much political credit.
Rio Grande

Why Obama Could Be the Biggest Obstacle to An Immigration Deal

Sometimes stepping back and using soft power makes sense on Capitol Hill and in diplomacy. 
Barack Obama, Valerie Jarrett

The Valerie Jarrett Moment

As other inner-circle players move on, this longtime friend of the Obamas is poised to gain even more influence in the White House.
Vice Presidential Debate

Will Biden, Ryan Cash in on Washington Experience in 2016?

Vice President Joe Biden and Paul Ryan share one glaring similarity that could make or break them in 2016 – they are leveraging their insider status to play a significant role in the future of their parties.
Latham and Boswell

Iowa Democrat Mike Sherzan Declares House Bid Against Latham

Iowa Democrat Mike Sherzan says he's been eyeing a congressional bid since 2010, but he needed time to transition his financial services firm in preparation for a run. Now, he says he's ready to go: Sherzan announced Monday that he is running for Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District, and he won't be...
Mary Landrieu and Harry Reid

Red-State Democrats' Reelection Playbook

President Obama won't have to go before voters again, but a handful of Democratic senators from conservative states will, and the president's agenda, newly stamped with a liberal imprimatur at the inauguration, could prove tricky for them to navigate.
Obama greets supporters at a campaign event

Opinion: Obama’s Electoral Coalition Is Now His Policy Coalition

As demonstrated in the exit polls and rehashed in countless articles since the election, Barack Obama’s decisive reelection victory was a triumph for a still-emerging, majority Democratic Obama coalition, which we said in a pair of preelection Next America articles would define a new civic ethos, or consensus on the role of government, for the nation.
Barack Obama Delivers Inaugural Address on Jan. 21, 2013

Obama's Climate Vow Could Make EPA a Political Target

President Obama’s second Inaugural Address left no doubt about his desire to put climate change front and center in his second term. He’s likely to pursue his goals through executive actions rather than legislation, at least initially.
Barack Obama, Harry Reid

Obama: A Party of One

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

Will Obama's Nod to Gay Rights Irk Black Backers?

By linking the founding moments of women's rights (Seneca Falls, N.Y.), African-American rights (Selma, Ala.), and gay rights (Stonewall Inn), President Obama stepped forcefully into a politically charged zone.
Support of Gay Marriage and Obama

Obama's Mention of Gay Rights May Raise Eyebrows Among Black Backers

Linking gay rights to civil rights is not without risks.

Schumer and D.C. Water

Although most of the political world is all about the conventions, back in Washington, planning over the presidential inauguration has begun. And next on tap: the kind of water that will be served.
Ashley Judd

Why Ashley Judd's Breakup Is Bad News for Mitch McConnell

Actress Ashley Judd and Indy Car driver Dario Franchitti are ending their marriage after 11 years, and, yes, it affects Mitch McConnell.
Newt Gingrich

Gingrich to Republicans: Think Different

The ex-House speaker rebukes Romney and says the GOP's future lies with its governors.
Netanyahu

How Bibi Beat Barack

Obama desperately wants peace in Israel. Too bad there’s nothing he can do to force it.
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.
Mill Creek Generating Station in Louisville, Kentucky

The Perils of Bypassing Congress

If a president's first term is about reelection, his second is about history. And as President Obama made clear in his inaugural address last week, he is hoping to make history by tackling climate change.
Obama Gives the 2013 State of the Union

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

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

Why Rand Paul Is Marco Rubio's Biggest Political Threat

Paul is acting like he’s already preparing a future presidential campaign, courting activists from early-primary states, smoothing out his positions on foreign policy, and delivering a high-profile national address, competing against a potential future GOP rival, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida.
Terry Gilbert kisses his husband Paul Beppler

For Obama, Social Equality Will Come Easier Than Economic Equality

President Obama wants more social tolerance and economic opportunity. One goal is more achievable than the other.
Reince Priebus

GOP Plots Path Back to Power

With President Obama’s second inauguration still ringing in their ears, Republican national party leaders are hunkering down for three days of soul-searching.
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.

How Obama Can Tackle Climate Change Without Congress

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

Is Obama Trying to Destroy the GOP?

The president pokes at the GOP and asks citizens to put the pressure on. Is he trying to destroy the opposition party?
Gay Military Pride

The GOP's Uncomfortable Debate Over Gay Marriage

As Republicans rebound from the 2012 election and plot their future, an uncomfortable debate over gay rights is taking place.
Tom Cotton

3 Pieces of Advice from a Freshman Republican to the GOP

Freshman Republican Rep. Tom Cotton of Arkansas sat for a Q&A in a room full of conservatives at the National Review Institute summit in Washington on Friday. When he finished speaking there was boisterous applause, and one woman walked up to him after the speech and said, "You'll be president one day." Cotton shook her hand, gave an aw-shucks thank you and walked on to glad-hand with other conservatives. He's one of the party's rising stars and is already being talked about as a potential challenger to Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor in 2014. Here are three things we've learned about him after the wide-ranging discussion that touched on immigration--he largely dodged a question on what the GOP should do about "amnesty," saying choosing between that and self-deportation is a false choice--and gun control--he things the president's proposals are all wrong.

Previewing the Sunday Shows

This week's Sunday shows will look back on President Obama's second inauguration and preview the coming battles in Congress. Meet the Press will host Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., in an exclusive interview, followed by a a panel featuring NAACP CEO Ben Jealous and incoming Heritage Foundation President...
Romney Victory

Team Romney Accidentally Publishes Victory Website

Mitt Romney suffered a sound defeat on Tuesday but you’d never know it from his campaign’s victory website, briefly published by mistake on Tuesday night.
Angry Obama

Why (and How) Obama Might Be Raising Expectations Too High Again

The president's newly confrontational approach might feel better, but it's a capitulation to the times that may backfire.
Paul Ryan, Bobby Jindal, Marco Rubio

Is the GOP Moving to the Center? Or Just Getting Sane?

Capitulation on debt ceiling and immigration suggests the GOP is eying vacuum created by left-leaning White House.
Obama Discussion on Immigration

Obama Legacy on Immigration Reform Tied to Rubio, His Frenemy

President Obama and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, arguably the two most important people in a potential immigration deal, aren’t exactly pals.
Rubio, Warner, Moran, Coons

Can Obama and Rubio Be Immigration Frenemies?

President Obama and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, arguably the two most important people in a potential immigration deal, aren’t exactly pals.
Dave Camp

Is the GOP's Debt-Ceiling Proposal Constitutional?

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

Why Would Anyone Want to Run for Congress?

How both political parties seduce (and sometimes browbeat) ordinary citizens into seeking a position in the nation’s most despised club. 
President Obama and Aung San Suu Kyi

Myanmar's Struggle Toward Democracy -- VIDEO

Below are three videos documenting Myanmar's struggle with authoritarian rule and democracy.
Obama at State of the Union

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

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

White House: North Korean Test Will Not Change SOTU

Obama must confront an embarrassing failure of his nonproliferation policies on the eve of his big speech.

Poll: Kasich Numbers Improving, Remains Vulnerable

Ohio Gov. John Kasich has largely turned around the negative approval ratings he faced early in his term, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll released Tuesday, but a plurality of voters feel the Republican does not deserve to be reelected in 2014, the poll shows. The poll represents Quinn...
Obama announces Cabinet nominations

Obama Reshapes Cabinet For a Second Term

With Inauguration Day approaching, President Obama is reshaping his Cabinet and White House staff for his second term. In the latest change, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has said he will leave his job at the end of March, creating an opening at the helm of the agency that oversees public lands.

In Japan, Election a Symbol of Perpetual Change, Uncertainty

Last month, the United States completed a quadrennial Democratic exercise, culminating more than a year of debates, campaign stops, and speeches with the reelection of President Obama for a second four-year term. After its own general election on Sunday, Japan will inaugurate its seventh prime minister in six and a half years.
Jay Rockefeller (D-WV)

What Does Jay Rockefeller Have to Say Now That He Doesn't Have to Face Voters?

The West Virginia senator is a populist champion. Will he still champion coal?

Geithner: Don’t Delay on Cliff Deal

The Treasury secretary said the absence of a long-term solution would both leave the U.S. economy in its current state of uncertainty over its fiscal future, and apply a new layer of uncertainty on top of that: Whether there would ever be an incentive for anyone to come to the table to make a deficit deal that is sure to involve compromise. 
Brennan

John Brennan’s Love-Hate Relationship With Drones

The CIA nominee wants to dump the drones program on the Pentagon, but Defense nominee Chuck Hagel won't be happy about that.
Ashley Judd

Why Republicans Are Getting Antsy Over Ashley Judd

Actress Ashley Judd hasn't declared if she'll challenge Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in next year’s Kentucky Senate race. But from the way Republicans are acting, they sound a little bit jumpy about the prospect of her campaign. 
Gale Norton on a horse

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

A conservative group has ideas for stewardship, but global warming is not part of its mission.
Reagan Assassination Attempt, After Shots Fired

Is Gabby Giffords the New Jim Brady?

As Gabrielle Giffords announced her efforts to prevent gun violence pm Tuesday—exactly two years after she was shot in the head while meeting with constituents—some gun-control advocates say they see a powerful new symbol for their cause.

Boehner Has Momentum on Debt Plan

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

Obama's Bad-Cop Act is Working

Obama is often playing bad cop to Biden's good cop these days. Bad news for the Kumbaya crowd: It seems to be working.
Empty Office

Frustrated Aides Leaving Capitol Hill

Fed up with gridlock, legislative staffers who specialize in energy and environment are fleeing.
Gay Marriage Protest

Will Republicans Move to the Middle on Gay Rights?

Public opinion is moving away from social conservatives, but the issue is deeply polarizing.

Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton End Marriage of Convenience with "60 Minutes" Lovefest

In a “60 Minutes” interview raising eyebrows in status-obsessed Washington, outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she and President Obama buried the hatchet after their 2008 campaign “because we both love our country.” Obama called Clinton one of the greatest diplomats in U.S. history.
Democratic presidential hopefuls Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton

Obama, Clinton End Marriage of Convenience with '60 Minutes' Lovefest

Obama dismissed "incorrigable' chatter about 2016 but fuels Clinton-Biden speculation with TV chat.
Inauguration Photos from the Capitol

Worried GOP? Paul Ryan Has a Plan

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

Kerry's Confirmation Kicks Off

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE KERRY’S CONFIRMATION KICKS OFF. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., will appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today, the committee that he chairs, for a hearing on his own confirmation as secretary...
Obama gives Inauguration speech at the Capitol

Honesty is Needed to Save the Great Society

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

How The Onion's 'Diamond' Joe Biden Took on a Life of His Own

America's favorite fake veep: He's your drunk, dirty uncle who washes his car shirtless and doesn't do what he's told. Is he anything like the real thing?
Abortion Protest at Supreme Court

As Roe v. Wade Turns 40, Foes Focus on State Capitols

President Obama’s reelection bid emphasized abortion rights more than any other presidential campaign in history, but the battle will be most heated in the states.
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.
Denis McDonough

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

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

A Boy Scout Rebel Who Accepted Gays in 1992 Is About to Be Vindicated

21 years ago, Scoutmaster Michael Cahn made a bold challenge to the Scouts' orthodoxy. Now, the change he called for could be happening.
Obama

Obama's Message to Republicans: I Won

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

New Bloomberg Sunday Show Debuts

Bloomberg’s Capitol Gains, a new show focused on the business of Washington, is joining the Sunday lineup.    

The Plan for GOP Recovery

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE THE PLAN FOR GOP RECOVERY. The first step, as the Republican Party is learning, is to admit you have a problem. One thing is already clear: Recovery won’t be quick, easy, or painless, as National Journal...
George McGovern

On War and Peace, George McGovern Will Die Vindicated

Think of all the Americans who would be alive today if the country had listened to George McGovern rather than his opponents about the Vietnam War. But America didn't listen then, and it's not listening now.

Graham Threatens Brennan, Hagel Confirmations

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE GRAHAM THREATENS BRENNAN, HAGEL CONFIRMATIONS. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Sunday on CBS News’s Face the Nation that he would take steps to delay the confirmations of President Obama’s nominees f...
Barack Obama

Why Obama Is Giving Up on Right-Leaning Whites

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

North Korea's Missile Launch Reveals International Failures

If there is a common threat that should rightly overcome mistrust and galvanize regional cooperation among the United States, Japan, South Korea, and China, it most certainly should be the prospect of a 30-year old leader of a terrorized population with his finger on a nuclear trigger.
Barack Obama SOTU

Can This Congress Be Saved?

National Journal’s annual vote ratings show a Congress as paralyzed and polarized as ever. But better days may lie ahead.
Twitter

The 10 Stories You Cared About Most in 2012

Here's a look at the stories you made popular on social media in 2012.
Election 2012, Obama Speaks

Obama Gets Second Chance at a Mandate

Greg Sargent, the well-respected opinion blogger for The Washington Post, asks an important question today: "Why, now that Obama has won a resounding victory, is this suddenly being talked about as a small, no-mandate election?"
Yes We Can Obama Rally Grant Park

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

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

Would Vice-President Elect Ryan Stay for the Lame Duck?

Should Mitt Romney win, would Vice President Elect Paul Ryan remain in the House until inauguration day? It's a cart-before-the-House question but an intriguing one. The lame duck is going to be a free for all no matter who wins the presidency or control of the Senate. It's hard to see Ryan leaving...

Immigration Reform Ramping Up This Week

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM RAMPING UP THIS WEEK. Concerted immigration reform efforts begin this week, with President Obama unveiling a proposal and a bipartisan group of lawmakers agreeing on a set of principles...
Bobby Jindal

Bobby Jindal Needs to Stop Giving Rebuttals

What the heck is Bobby Jindal talking about?
Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais

Opinion: Asian-Americans Are an Emerging Force in U.S. Politics

In the countless commentaries focusing on the demographic factors shaping the outcome of the 2012 election, there has been virtually nothing said about the contribution of Asian-Americans to the electorate and to Barack Obama’s reelection. It will be hard to ignore this growing group of voters much longer.
Robert Egger

After D.C. Central Kitchen

Robert Egger plans to take his mission to feed the hungry coast to coast.
FDR

FDR's Call for Action

National Journal's George Condon on FDR's historic inaugural address and the challenges that modern leaders face in following in his footsteps.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Can Obama Dodge the Second-Term Trap?

With the right people around and a realization that Congress will soon shift gears for midterm elections, he just might avoid the curse. 

What We Learned: Under The Bus

What we at The Hotline learned this week: -- It didn't take long for Republicans to start throwing Mitt Romney under the bus, once their own 2016 prospects come into focus. At the RGA meeting this week in Las Vegas, where party leaders woo big donors, Romney came in for a tongue-lashing from just a...
mary j

Who Is Performing at the DNC

Republican National Convention, you had your moments of glitz and Hollywood flair. Now, it's the Democrats' turn.
Drone Strike funueral

Targeted Killings: Obama’s Endless War

Even as it pulls forces out of Afghanistan, the Obama administration wants to continue high-tech targeted killings in the war against terrorists.
Obama

Obama's Second Term May Be More Blessed Than Cursed

By looking at two-term stars more closely, we can see how and why Barack Obama might be more blessed than cursed for his second term.

Barbour Doesn't Blame Obama for Campaigning During Isaac

President Obama has suffered some criticism this week as he campaigns across key swing states while Hurricane Isaac rips through Louisiana. And frankly, former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour isn't sure what all the fuss is about.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner

Outgoing Treasury Secretary Geithner Still Immersed in Fiscal-Cliff Negotiations

In the postelection showdown over expiring tax cuts and automatic spending reductions, seasoned crisis fighter Timothy Geithner will play a crucial role as the administration’s top economic official and a liaison to both Capitol Hill and the financial markets.
House for sale

Gallup: Americans Are Better Off Than Four Years Ago

Several economic factors and mood indicators are better today than when President Obama took office nearly four years ago, according to a new analysis by Gallup.

Akin Tops Most Conservative Lawmaker List

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE AKIN TOPS MOST CONSERVATIVE LAWMAKER LIST. Topping National Journal's annual list of the most conservative representatives in the House is former Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo., who is perhaps best remembered for h...
President Obama: Second Term Acceptance Speech

Obama Victory Comes With No Mandate

Barack Obama won a second term but no mandate. Thanks in part to his own small-bore and brutish campaign, victory guarantees the president nothing more than the headache of building consensus in a gridlocked capital on behalf of a polarized public.
Ann Wagner

Rising Freshman: Ann Wagner Goes to Head of the Class

Before Ann Wagner even won her seat in the House, the Missouri Republican already had reached out to introduce herself to the other 34 members of the incoming GOP class. She had contributed money to some, campaigned for others, and chatted amiably with still more.

SOTU is a Fundraising Opportunity

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE SOTU IS A FUNDRAISING OPPORTUNITY. The White House and outside supporters of the president will use Tuesday's State of the Union address to launch separate targeted social media, public outreach, and fundr...
Cliffs of Moher

Lawmakers Should Think Twice Before Going Off the Fiscal Cliff

With the economy so fragile, economists warn that even a few steps into the void could send the country back into a recession.

Brennan’s Love-Hate Relationship With Drones

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE JOHN BRENNAN’S LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIP WITH DRONES. With President Obama’s CIA nominee, John Brennan, in the spotlight this week, Washington is engaged in a big debate over the ethics of covert drone wa...
Hugo Chavez

What Happens to Venezuela After Hugo Chavez?

How a possible power struggle in Caracas gets resolved may come down to a few constitutional words.

Schumer Wants Dome Money

The battle to fix the leaking Capitol dome appeared to be winding down under the assumption that a must-pass continuing resolution would be approved in September without restoration funds. But in a letter to Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio on Monday, Senate Rules Chairman Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., asked that "an exception be made for the sake of an urgent bit of housekeeping."

Scoop: Colburn to OFA as Comms Director

Veteran campaign hand Brent Colburn is headed to Chicago to become the communications director for President Obama's re-election campaign, the Alley has learned. Currently, Colburn is the assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security where he advises th...

House Jumps Into Immigration Reform

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE IMMIGRATION DEBATE OPENS IN HOUSE. The House jumps into the immigration reform debate today featuring two panel discussions that "examine our current legal immigration system and ways to improve it" and "d...

Did Chuck Hagel Fail?

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE DID CHUCK HAGEL FAIL? The strong, silent approach worked for former Sen. Chuck Hagel when he was in Congress and able to ask the questions. But it wasn’t working on Thursday, as National Journal’s...

Analysis: If Obama Loses, It Won't Be Because He's Black

If Obama loses this election, it won't be for what many will say are the obvious reasons -- because the economy is weak and Obama's an African-American. It'll be because he ran as a failed progressive rather than a successful centrist.

Walking Immigration Up the Hill

CongressWhite HouseNational SecurityPoliticsEnergyEconomy & BudgetHealth Care TOP FIVE WALKING IMMIGRATION UP THE HILL. The outlines of the coming immigration debate have been set but now lawmakers must hunker down and write legislation—and that could be a long process. There may not be mo...

Full Text: President Obama's 2013 State of the Union Speech

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of Congress, fellow citizens:

Defining What Makes a Democrat, Republican Stirs a Debate

A recent Perspectives article on a survey exploring the demographic breakdown of U.S. voters sparked a rebuttal that claimed the survey used extreme language to further the polarization between Democrats and Republicans.
Paul Ryan

Ryan Defends GOP Convention Speech Claims

In network interviews on Thursday evening, Republican vice presidential nominee Rep. Paul Ryan defended a number of claims he made in his convention acceptance speech, including his contention that President Obama broke a promise by not keeping open a General Motors plant in his hometown of Janesville, Wis.  
China Shipping Line

Two Faces of American Power

Pragmatism and idealism will face off in the final presidential debate. Real-life foreign policy lies somewhere in between.
Barack Obama

Obama at the Hinge of History

The president does not have the comfort or convenience of shelving his campaign rhetoric. His legacy-shaping window of opportunity is brief—20 months at the very most.  
Mitt Romney and Barack Obama

N2K Presidential: In Second Debate, Obama Survives to Fight Another Day

“I am the president,” President Obama said during his answer Tuesday to a question about the fatal attacks on Americans in Libya last month. It is a fact whose shelf life many Democrats had sweated after the first presidential debate two weeks ago.

Polls Differ on Whether Obama or Romney Has a Lead

President Obama and Mitt Romney are in a statistical dead heat in Gallup's inaugural daily tracking poll released on Monday.
Obama

The Stakes for Obama in the Next Debate

President Obama’s biggest challenge in the debate may not be Mitt Romney himself but the “town-hall” format of the event. 

The Rich Fantasy Life of Newt Gingrich

Isn't there something a little strange about the way Newt Gingrich keeps talking in ever greater detail about what he will do his first day in the White House? Even in conceding a devastating loss in Florida--one in which many voters spurned him on the basis of moral character and electability, according to exit polls--Gingrich went on and on last night about moving into the WH. He said he'll be so busy his first day--signing,  "two hours after the inaugural address," executive orders abolishing "all of the White House czars," opening the embassy in Jerusalem and "recognizing Israel" (sic), and reinstating Reagan's anti-abortion "Mexico City policy" -- that he and Callista will barely have time to have fun at the inaugural balls.
Sliwa-Zamora friendship3

Our Diverse Future

Virtually every issue facing U.S. society promises to be affected by deep currents of change—changes illuminated by significant demographic shifts between the young and the old. That’s what this inaugural special edition is about.

What the Neocons of 2001 Can Tell Us About the Campaign of 2012

The startling revelations in a new book about warnings of an imminent al-Qaida attack delivered to George W. Bush long before 9/11 give us new insights into his administration’s alleged negligence in preventing the attack, which occurred 11 years ago Tuesday. 
Capitol Dome

CR May Delay Repairs to Capitol Dome

A plan for Congress to use a stopgap spending measure to keep government funding at the same level for six months would snub a long list of appropriations — including one that could keep the roof from falling in.
Job Fair in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

New Jobless Rate Shatters Four-Year Talking Point for Romney, GOP

Among the dismal economic statistics that Mitt Romney has had at his disposal during his presidential run, one was particularly powerful: unemployment above 8 percent for all but the first 11 days of President Obama’s term.
Sliwa-Zamora friendship

Diversity Takes Root

Diversity is reshaping places unfamiliar with it. That's creating collisions--but also connections like those between Iowa farmer Priscilla Sliwa and a Guatemalan family she embraces in Decorah, Iowa.
Derek Verdeyen

Secret Service Readies Whiz-Bang Human Hive Mind

As far as high-profile, high-security events go, Derek Verdeyen has been around the block more than a few times.
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