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Google Track Team

Congress Demands to Know if Google Glass Will Violate Your Privacy

Eight questions for CEO Larry Page
Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel, I-64

Why You Won’t Own Your Road

Cash-strapped states such as Virginia are turning to the private sector to help finance large infrastructure projects.
cell phone google fiber

How to Get Google Fiber—Without Google

The trick is to get a university on your side.
Eric Holder

What’s the Case for the Justice Department Seizing the AP’s Records?

Eric Holder’s former top spokesman argues the Attorney General wants to crack down on leakers—but not journalists.
food truck

How Can Conservatives Win Over Young Voters? Go For Their Guts.

It's a lot easier to get young voters to care about government overreach if you're talking about food trucks.

National Journal Launches New E-Book: In Lew of Geithner

National Journal launched its debut e-book, In Lew of Geithner, in which Chief Correspondent Michael Hirsh wonders if ex-Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's replacement, Jacob Lew, has the right stuff to rein in Wall Street. With this new long-form digital content, readers will be able to delve deeper into the uncertain future of our nation’s economy and financial oversight, going a step beyond what is typically available in most news outlets.
chris hadfield

Chris Hadfield's Haunting Goodbye Is a Beautiful Rendition of 'Space Oddity'

The Canadian who's inspired hundreds of thousands with his fascination with space has capped his voyage with a tribute to David Bowie.
castro

Why Might the Cleveland Kidnapper Get Charged With Murder?

The government is wading into the murky waters of what constitutes a human life.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin wears 3D glasses

Play of the Day: Air Hockey Diplomacy

Fast forward to 2:00 to see how John Kerry and Vladimir Putin met to discuss important foreign policy.
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.  
syria internet outage

Syria Has Switched Off the Internet For the Second Time in 6 Months

On Twitter, reports are coming in that the Syrian government has cut off Internet access to its citizens.
Judith Rodin

The Hottest Trend for Wealthy Do-Gooders

The Rockefeller Foundation's Judith Rodin explains impact investing. But she warns: "This is not the solution to less government funding."
internet retailer online sales

What if the Internet Sales Tax Doesn't Make it Through Congress?

Legislation allowing states to collect sales taxes on purchases made over the Internet—approved by the Senate in a 69-27 vote Monday evening—faces an uncertain future in the House.
stephen lynch

Previewing the Sunday Shows

This week the Sunday shows are focusing on Syria and the continuing investigation on the Boston Marathon Bombing. The specter of immigration reform will also have a role in the programming. Rep. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., who hasn't ruled out a bid against Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., in 2014, will be on Meet...
hollywood LA

The New Urban Brand War: A Top-Level Domain for Every City on Earth

Craving a slice in Istanbul? Check out www.pizza.istanbul. Need a taxi in Tokyo? Try www.taxi.tokyo.
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.
aliens

From Pandora to D.C.: 1 Man's Quest to Make Aliens Seem Real

Reuben Langdon spent four years flying around on make-believe aliens as the lead stunt double on Avatar. Now, he’s in D.C. trying to convince the world that such an extraterrestrial being could exist.
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.
google now

Google Now: Bringing Us One Step Closer to the Star Trek Computer

The firm is doubling down on search that is conversational, contextual, and personal.
Mitch McConnell

Mitch McConnell Wants to Be the Republican Party's Chief Tech Innovator

The 71-year-old GOP leader's campaign sees closing the data gap with the Democrats as a key to reelection.
MOOC

How Online Education Saves Everyone Money

Online learning isn’t just another path into the middle class. It’s also a way for the government to spend more wisely. 
Aerospace

Five Cool Innovations to Lift Workers Into the Middle Class

From rent-subsidized apartments for single moms to an online medical clinic that saves $88 per diagnosis, American ingenuity works. 
bitcoin

What an Internet Sales Tax Could Mean for Your Bitcoin Stash

How will states collect taxes on bitcoin transactions if they're anonymous and untraceable?
potd425

Play of the Day: Looking Back at Bush, Looking Forward to Mars

Fast forward to 4:35 to see how the Rover photo might help Earth if there is intelligent life on Mars.

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

For a few hours Thursday, Dallas is the center of American presidential power.
telephone operators, cell phone

Why We Need to Move Ahead on IP

When it comes to communications technology, federal regulations shouldn’t discourage innovation. They have to keep up with the times.
Rep. Justin Amash

Mich. GOP Establishment Hopes for Rogers, Frets Over Amash

Longtime Michigan Republican operatives are open about their desire to see Rep. Mike Rogers run in the state's open-seat Senate race, but they're worried Rep. Justin Amash -- who possesses little regard for the GOP establishment -- won't let the possibility of a damaging primary derail his ambition...
Androids in Space

Why NASA Is Firing Cell Phones Into Space

What it could mean for the future of satellite tech
George W. Bush library

Will George W. Bush Ever Get Historians on His Side?

Truman and Eisenhower won belated respect, but they didn't have an Iraq problem.
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.
bush

Go Ahead, Admit It: George W. Bush Is a Good Man

In the rush to mythologize and demonize our presidents, we forget they're human.
Carmen Ortiz

4 Things To Know About Boston Bombings Prosecutor Carmen Ortiz

Once a rising political star, the U.S. Attorney heading the Boston Marathon case could use the spotlight to regain her luster.
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.
Mall of America

'Soft Targets' Remain Vulnerable to Terrorist Attacks

While authorities continue to focus on finding one of the suspects sought in the deadly Boston bombings, attention will soon turn to how to prevent another terrorist attack on an event with limited security.
Boston marathon explosion

There Aren't Easy Policy Prescriptions After Boston Bombing

How do you prevent self-styled terrorists who appear to be acting alone? 
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. 
Karen Christian

Karen Christian, Majority Chief Counsel, Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee

Karen Christian, chief counsel for the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, is best known for her lead role in the Solyndra investigation, which dominated much of the GOP agenda on the committee during the last Congress.
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.
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.
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.   

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.
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.
Women's Medical Society

Why Dr. Kermit Gosnell's Trial Should Be a Major News Story

The dead babies. The exploited women. The racism. The numerous governmental failures. It just is insanely newsworthy.
Asteroid Vesta

Play of the Day: Lassoing an Asteroid

Fast forward to 2:35 to see why Colbert loves the lasso plan.
Yamaha Motor Corporation USA's RMax

What Drones Can Do for You

Prescription drugs, fast-food delivery, disaster relief—unmanned aerial vehicles can be handy in all sorts of ways. 
President Obama's budget

A New Budget for a New Party

Obama's fiscal proposal aligns him with the politics of minority, millennial, and college-educated voters.
Jay-Z and Beyonce

Jay-Z Blasts His Republican Critics

The rapper's new song addresses his controversial Cuba trip.
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.
Obama Budget

7 Things to Know About Obama's Budget

You’ll see a lot about the aggregate budget size of $3.8 trillion. But here are the things that are really worth knowing.
Kim Jong-Un

Play of the Day: The Looming Threat of Kim Jong Un

Fast forward to 4:20 to see Ferguson show why Kim shouldn't be strapped for money.
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.
POTD48

Play of the Day: Obama's Scale of Hot Public Servants

Fast forward to 3:40 to see Letterman lament Bush’s reading abilities.
Shush

When Corporations Are Hacked, Who Should Know?

Companies hurt themselves—but help the rest of us—when they disclose cyberattacks. 
Mark Pryor

Why This Democratic Senator Won't Support Same-Sex Marriage

There are now only four Democratic senators who have not expressed support for gay marriage. Sen. Mark Pryor is likely to stay that way.
kim jong un hack

Which North Korea Did Anonymous Really Hack?

The intrusion was relatively minor in that it didn't involve a penentration of North Korea's domestic Internet. 
Same-Sex Marriage

Which Republican Senator Will Support Gay Marriage Next? 5 to Watch.

Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins could be the next two to flip.
Northrop Grumman

This Defense Contractor Is Repeatedly Spear-Phishing 68,000 Innocent People

One company with deep Washington connections is running a huge online scam. It involves tens of thousands of victims. And it's completely legal.
iPhone

Could Your Smartphone Lower Your Electricity Bill?

Smart-grid technology aims to prevent blackouts, cut costs, and maybe even change the way you use energy.
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.
Brain

Obama's Moonshot—Map the Human Brain

The Apollo Missions and Human Genome Project were hugely beneficial to society. Will a cell-by-cell map of the brain do the same?
payday lenders

The Online Lenders That Could Break the Payday Loan Racket

Payday loans provide quick cash to many Americans--but with crippling fees. New online lenders may provide a path to good credit.
Drone

Drone Lobbyist: 'I Don't Use the Word Drone'

Drones are coming to U.S. skies. The Federal Aviation Administration is charged with finding a safe way for drones to fly for commercial purposes by 2015, but civil liberties advocates worry privacy rights might suffer.
Supreme Court DOMA

Why Are All These Democrats Suddenly Supporting Gay Marriage?

There's been an "evolution" in their thinking. There's also a lot of money on the table. 
shh quiet

Will Businesses Be Forced to Say If They've Been Hacked?

The idea is still a long way from reality, but Congress has taken the first step toward requiring companies to admit when they've been hacked.
Scott Case

Priceline's Co-Founder Explains the Secret to a Successful Startup

Scott Case launched a billion-dollar business. Now he's trying to help others do the same as head of Startup America Partnership.
POTD321

Play of the Day: March Madness!

Fast forward to 4:00 to watch Letterman get the scoop on Ryan’s budget proposal from the man himself. Well, kind of.
blogger hacker

Yes, Cyberattacks Are Perfectly Legal Under the Laws of War

A recent study from a group of NATO experts seeks to adapt the existing laws of war to cyberspace, laying down 95 new ideas over 282 pages.
Capitol building is reflected in the Capitol Reflecting Pool

DSCC Outraises NRSC 2-to-1

The National Republican Senatorial Committee raised nearly $2.2 million in February, according to numbers provided by the political committee, figures that will likely do little to quiet concern the group is struggling to raise money in the early going of the 2014 cycle. It was the second consecuti...

National Security Insiders: Obama Can't Bring Israelis and Palestinians to Negotiating Table

President Obama is headed to the Holy Land this week, but 72 percent of National Journal's National Security Insiders are not optimistic he can bring Israelis and Palestinians to the negotiating table anytime soon.
Pope Francis

Play of the Day: A Washington Conclave?

Fast forward to 2:05 to see which magazine cover wants to feature Vice President Joe Biden.
Podesta

John Podesta Channels Rand Paul to Undercut Obama on Drone Warfare

Obama ally John Podesta methodically undercut every conceivable argument against transparency. If you're Obama and you lose Podesta, it's far past time to drag drone warfare out of the dark.
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.
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.
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.  
Draganflyer X6

The Wonderful World of Drones

Fighting fires, reducing crime, counting sea lions: the case for domestic UAVs.
POTD37

Play of the Day: Snowquester Passes, but Sequester Remains

The clever name for the storm that (kind of) hit the Washington region Wednesday made some waves on late-night TV, with Conan O’Brien taking the opportunity to mention that Congress hasn’t gotten anything done lately. On The Colbert Report, host Stephen Colbert highlighted the use of portmanteaus like “Snowquester.” 
Shawn Bray of INTERPOL Washington

A Look Inside Interpol in Washington

Shawn Bray, the new head of Interpol in Washington, unlocks some of the mystery surrounding the global intelligence agency.
Leahy

That Was Quick: Now There's Legislation on Cell-Phone Unlocking

From the beginning, White House petitioners looking to keep phone-unlocking legal have insisted that they want Congress’ help. Barely a day after their first victory, in which the Obama administration expressed support for unlocking, they got more good news: Congress is paying attention.
Tobacco Workers

Opinion: Immigrants Did Not Take Your Job

Writes Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute: It's time  conservatives embrace a reform measure, for political and economic reasons.
Sergey Brin

Diversity and the U.S. Billionaires on Forbes's List

Forbes's annual list of the world’s richest people is out, and if you filter the 1,426 names for those in the U.S., you find interesting numbers among the 36 individuals or families represented in the U.S. top 100.
Mark Warner

Mark Warner's Evolution on Same-Sex Marriage

Of the 40 Senators who signed onto an amicus brief asking the Supreme Court to strike down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, one name stands out among those up for reelection in 2014: Sen. Mark Warner. The Virginia Democrat released a follow-up statement in which he explained his reasoni...
dna

What Is a Gene And How Does it Apply to the Law? The Supreme Court Still Doesn't Know.

DNA was  discovered 60 years ago this week, and since then it's been muddling up the legal system.
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.
Burl Ives

Tennessee Williams Offers Window Into the Mendacity That Defines the Sequester

The playwright captures its essence better than any D.C. politician.
Kevin Brady

Rep. Kevin Brady’s Evolution on Gun Control

The past is a painful place for Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas. With voice strained and a steely look betraying a man whose thoughts have traveled back in time, the congressman recalled the day that changed his life. “We don’t talk about it much,” Brady said. “Mainly because it’s taken us this long to be able to talk about it.”
Brandon Singlaterry

The Young and the Powerless

Social Security and most of Medicare are exempt from automatic spending cuts. That means the sequester falls hardest on America's youth.
Broun

Broun Logs Surprisingly Moderate Score in Vote Ratings

Rep. Paul Broun stands out among his fellow Republicans in the Georgia delegation, many of whom are considering challenging him for Sen. Saxby Chambliss' seat in 2014. Broun was the first -- and so far only -- to announce a bid for the Senate. He has received perhaps the most national media attention, though the bulk of it has centered on his sometimes controversial rhetoric. And he is by far the least conservative, according to National Journal's 2012 Vote Ratings.
cell phone inventor Martin Cooper

5 Inventors of the Cell Phone Honored for Wiring the World

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

Bush's Paintings and the Art of Projecting Guilt

Bush's art reveals a man we didn't know, and one reviewers speculate is trying for absolution through painting.  

Paul Broun First to File for Ga. Senate Race

Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on Wednesday to run for Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss' seat, just hours before he is scheduled to make an announcement about the race in Atlanta. Broun is the first candidate to enter the race ahead of what is expected to...
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.
Barack Obama on January 25, 2013

Your Guide to the Ruling on Obama's Recess Appointments

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled on Friday that President Obama’s use of recess appointments to install three appointees to the National Labor Relations Board last January was unconstitutional. What’s the fuss all about?
Robert Wexler

Robert Wexler, Going It Alone

Former Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Fla., talks about advising President Obama in 2008, the fate of the House, and life as a freelance peacemaker.

Conservative Republicans Losing Steam on Default Dare

House Republican leadership appears to have quieted naysayers on their right who recently seemed hungry to threaten default and defy conventional arguments that such a hardline stance would trigger crisis.
Jerry Brown

Why the Democrats Are Golden in California

Demographic shifts and coastal liberalism have given huge power to Democrats. They control the state – but there's restlessness on the left.
Obama

Expect Obama to Be More Aggressive in His Second Term

Obama's forceful moves on controversial fronts represent a calculated gamble that the evolution of the U.S. electorate has reached a critical tipping point. 
Sun on the capitol dome

The Bright Side of Falling Off the Fiscal Cliff

As 2012 sputters to a close, it wraps up with a yawning gap between widespread economic pessimism and the actual state of economic affairs.
Jail

Documenting the Failed 'War on Drugs'

The year began with a line that was as much a lamentation as it was an astute observation. "The scale and brutality of our prisons are the moral scandal of American life," Adam Gopnik wrote in a trenchant essay in the Jan. 30 issue of the New Yorker. "How did we get here? How is it that our civilization, which rejects hanging and flogging and disemboweling, came to believe that caging vast numbers of people for decades is an acceptably humane condition?"
reagan assassination attempt

The Evolution of the NRA's Defense of Guns

Since 1934, when the first major federal weapons regulation was enacted, the National Rifle Association has significantly shifted its rhetoric and tactics regarding federal gun control. 
Boehner

A Role Reversal: Dems Grow More Unified While Cracks Form in the GOP

The endgame over the fiscal cliff, like the first stirrings of debate about gun control and immigration, all capture a subtle but potentially consequential shift in the Washington dynamic.

Don't Forget The Other Castro Brother

It's a given that San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, tapped by President Obama for the same Democratic National Convention keynote slot that rocketed him to prominence in 2004, will command attention Tuesday (and likely many days after). But don't forget about the man who comes before him tonight: Twin brother Joaquin Castro, the Democratic nominee in Texas's 20th Congressional District, is in line to make a faster impact on Washington, D.C. The House Democratic caucus badly needs young stars, and the younger Castro brother -- by about a minute -- has all the tools to become one.
Obama working the crowd at 2010 SOTU

Hot Ticket

Don’t know what to do before the big speech Tuesday night? Afraid the Tune Inn will be packed? Head on over to the pre-State of the Union cocktail reception for new members, thrown by National Journal and our sister publication The Atlantic.

FOREIGN AFFAIRS - The Army's Gamble

V CORPS FORWARD TACTICAL COMMAND, Central Iraq-The sound came with such suddenness and ferocity that all heads craned skyward as if in supplication: An Iraqi Scud missile was boring back through the atmosphere at terminal velocity. Just to the right of the 110-vehicle convoy, a Patriot anti-missile battery answered, with the sparkling contrails of two missiles clearly visible as they soared toward an impact point nearly six miles overhead. Along the shoulder of the road, hundreds of soldiers scrambled to don chemical protection suits as a multiwheeled Fox detection vehicle ran down the column "sniffing" for lethal chemical agents. Within minutes, the Patriot battery reported a successful intercept and confirmed that the Scud would have hit the ground less than a third of a mile in front of the convoy.
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