NJ Topics Regulations And Executive Orders

tmobile legere

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

Now Verizon is the only remaining petitioner in the case.
Gina McCarthy

Senate Committee Approves Gina McCarthy EPA Nomination Along Party Lines

Senate Republicans on Thursday eased their opposition to the nomination of Gina McCarthy, President Obama’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency—but her confirmation by the full Senate is not yet assured.
Fracking

New Fracking Rules Have Environmental Groups Worried

The energy industry is optimistic about new regulations for hydraulic fracturing expected to be issued as soon as Tuesday.
Drone

How One Jihadist Magazine Is Trying to Fight U.S. Drone Strikes

Help wanted: U.S. drone strikes have crippled our war effort—in need of expertise on how to disable or manipulate unmanned aircraft.
Sky

Why Carbon Is So Hard to Regulate

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

The U.S. Has Much, Much More Gas and Oil Than We Thought

The United States has double the amount of oil and three times the amount of natural gas than previously thought stored deep under the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana, according to new data the Obama administration released Tuesday.
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.
INTERNET USAGE

Companies Fight Hard to Shape Internet Regs

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

Waiting for a Clash on Climate Change

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

Utilities, Enviros Tracking New Rules

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

Why Obama's Environmental Pick Drives Some Republicans Crazy

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

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

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

Will California's Shale Oil Boom Go Bust?

When it comes to fracking used to extract oil and gas from shale, California regulators have remarkably little idea what is going on.
nuclear power plant

U.S. Renewable Energy Production Now Tops Nuclear Power

How's the U.S. energy landscape looking?
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.
Wells Fargo

Report: Threat of Foreclosure on Calif. Homes Disproportionately Affects Minorities

Leading mortgage lender Wells Fargo is urged to be more transparent about relief reporting and to grant more principal reductions.
Keystone XL Pipeline

Why the White House Loves Natural Gas

While green groups protest outside, the president huddles inside the White House with oil and gas executives.
Obama on Akin

Who's Going to Blink First on Cyber — Obama, or the House?

The Obama administration will now have to weigh in sooner rather than later on a highly contentious cybersecurity bill moving through the House.
coal plant

Coal Power Plants Are Killing Thousands in Europe

Lots of the world's attention has been focused recently on the startlingly high levels of smog in China. But things aren't too great in Europe, either, where the popularity of coal-fired power plants is endangering the lives of entire generations of people.
Busboys and Poets

Citizenship Isn't Always Foremost What Undocumented Workers Want

They just want to do their jobs, cash their paychecks, and be left alone. Here's a view of the immigration debate from the kitchen of your favorite restaurant.  
Busboys and Poets

What Undocumented Workers Really Want

It's not always citizenship. They just want to do their jobs, cash their paychecks, and be left alone. A view of the immigration debate from the kitchen of your favorite restaurant.
Gina McCarthy

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

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

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

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

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

The president's "College Scorecard" inspires "Obama Scorecard" and so-so State of the Union scores.
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.
Obama on State of the Union day

How Fear of a Cyber Pearl Harbor Is Uniting Washington

It’s been a long time coming -- and implementing it will take longer still -- but President Obama has finally signed a long-awaited executive order that promises to protect the nation’s railways, electrical grids, and other infrastructure from catastrophic cyberattack. Now comes the hard part.
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.

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

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of Congress, fellow citizens:
NRG Energy's W.A. Parish Electric Generating Station

Obama Begins New Push on Climate Agenda

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

Could a White House Order on Cybersecurity Drop This Week?

In the wake of recent high-profile hacking incidents at The New York Times and The Washington Post, the Obama administration has been speeding toward a long-anticipated executive order that would create ways for the federal government to share information with the private sector about potential cyberthreats. 
Barack Obama

There’s No Such Thing as Political Capital

The idea of political capital—or mandates, or momentum—is so poorly defined that presidents and pundits often get it wrong. With Obama’s State of the Union upon us, it’s time to rethink the term.

President Obama's Immigration Reform Plan (Full Text)

The White House has released a synopsis of the president's immigration proposals.

How Should Washington Address Climate Change?

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

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. 

Federal Workers Union Blasts GOP Pay-Freeze Effort

The largest federal employees union is lashing out at a House Republican plan to again vote to block President Obama’s proposed across-the-board pay increase for federal workers in 2013--and billing it as a way to help rein in Washington spending.
Obama

What Are Obama's Gun Control Proposals? An Easy Guide

The sweeping package that the president unveiled Wednesday includes proposals to ban assault weapons, limit high-capacity magazines, and improve mental-health care.
Trucking pollution

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

How President Obama could clean up carbon emissions—alone.

Who Will Succeed Jackson as EPA Head?

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

Lisa Jackson Stepping Down as EPA Head

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

EPA Scrambles on Year-End Regulatory Push

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

What Not to Look Forward to in 2013

As far as years go, 2012 wasn't too swell. But here are some reasons why you shouldn't be expecting much better out of 2013.
Follow National Journal