NJ Topics Senate

National Journal Coverage
Gabriel Gomez

Obama's Troubles Could Put Massachusetts Senate Seat In Play -- Again

In 2010, Republicans won a special election during a low point of Obama's presidency. Will it happen again?
Jay Dardenne

Dardenne Kicks Off Fundraising Tour

Don't think it's a done deal that Sen. David Vitter will be Louisiana's next governor; he still has to get through Lieutenant Gov. Jay Dardenne. And Dardenne is making moves to show he's ready for a fight. Dardenne is crisscrossing the state raising money for a likely gubernatorial bid, according t...
Ed Markey Ad

Watch the First Campaign Ad to Invoke the Newtown Shootings

Locked in a close Massachusetts Senate race, Ed Markey goes negative against Gabriel Gomez.
Google Track Team

Congress Demands to Know if Google Glass Will Violate Your Privacy

Eight questions for CEO Larry Page
Marco Rubio

Marco Rubio Makes His Move For 2016

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio hasn’t popped up in an early-primary state in six months, leaving potential Republican rivals like Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal to make the rounds while he carried the torch for his immigration reform plan.
Watergate Committee hearings

Watergate: When Congress Worked

The back-stabbing, press-leaking, hyper-partisan members of the committee investigating Nixon, which began hearings 40 years ago, still made history. Here’s how. 
Orrin Hatch

The Importance of Being Orrin

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

Senate Confirms Energy Secretary, Stalls on EPA and Labor Nominees

The Senate unanimously confirmed Obama’s choice for Energy but nominees for EPA administrator and Labor secretary are still on hold.

Gabriel Gomez Launches His First General Election TV Ad in Mass. Special

Former Navy SEAL Gabriel Gomez on Friday will launch his first television ad of the general election, emphasizing his military background. "I had a calling from an early age to serve my family's adopted country," Gomez says in the spot after introducing himself in Spanish. The ad does not mention...
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.
Eric Cantor

Eric Cantor’s Caucus Thwarts His Push for an Alternative Agenda

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor has learned, to his chagrin, that solving problems, much less finding compromises, is not on the agenda of a majority of his House Republican colleagues.
Cantor

Eric Cantor’s Caucus Thwarts His Push for an Alternative Agenda

Readers of It’s Even Worse Than It Looks know that I have not always treated House Majority Leader Eric Cantor kindly. I have excoriated him for engineering the debt-ceiling crisis in 2011 as a hostage-taking exercise, and then blowing up the talks between President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner that could have led to a grand bargain. Cantor himself recently took credit for the latter in a profile written by Ryan Lizza in The New Yorker. He told Lizza “that it was a ‘fair assessment’ that he talked Boehner out of accepting Obama’s deal. He said he told Boehner that it would be better, instead, to take the issues of taxes and spending to the voters and ‘have it out’ with the Democrats in the election. Why give Obama an enormous political victory, and potentially help him win reelection, when they might be able to negotiate a more favorable deal with a new Republican president? Boehner told Obama there was no deal. Instead of a grand bargain, Cantor and the House Republicans made a grand bet.”
Schatz

For Abercrombie, Senate Primary Is a Chance to Make His Mark

Rep. Colleen Hanabusa, D-Hawaii, may not be running for governor of her state, but she's still running against Gov. Neil Abercrombie as she gears up for a 2014 Senate primary. Nothing official has been worked out yet, but Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz will be able to count on strong support from th...
Mike Rogers

Feinstein: Rogers a 'Respected' Contender for FBI

The Obama administration is considering House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., for the top job at the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Bush-Era EPA Chief Calls Republicans ‘Sore Losers’

Republicans’ decision to boycott a planned committee vote of President Obama’s nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency makes them look like “sore losers,” says Christine Todd Whitman, EPA administrator under President George W. Bush.
immigration prayers

How the Ongoing Scandals Might Actually Aid Bipartisanship on Immigration Reform

If Republicans assume a hyper-partisan stance on IRS, DOJ, and Benghazi, they may have room to act in a bipartisan manner when it comes to immigration.
Eric Holder

Eric Holder in the Hot Seat as Congress Probes Scandals

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

Democrats See the IRS Scandal as the Most Toxic

In triage mode, Congressional Democrats want to treat (and separate themselves from) the trio of this week's scandals one-by-one.
Kathleen Sebelius

Search for ‘Obamacare’ Funding Angers Lawmakers

With money and time running out to implement the president’s health care law, administration officials are looking for funding wherever they can find it—and angering members of Congress along the way.
Sen. Debbie Stabenow

Senate Agriculture Committee Plows Forward on Farm Bill

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

As Washington Is Scandalized, The Tea Party Salivates

The swirl of Washington scandal offers the movement a kind of “I-told-you-so” bragging rights.
Jeff Sessions

Republican Immigration Critic Gets Slapped Down

The most potent illustration that Republicans have shifted their attitudes on immigration came Tuesday morning when all GOP members of the Senate Judiciary Committee rejected an amendment from Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., to severely limit the number of legal immigrants allowed into the country.
Democrats in Triage Mode

Democrats in Triage Mode on White House Scandals

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

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

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

Elizabeth Warren's Playbook to Win Over Young Voters

Massachusetts senator's focus on student loans is popular with college students.
Orrin Hatch

H-1B Visas to Have Their Day in Committee

The tech community will have its first chance Tuesday to weigh in, carefully, on major immigration legislation being debated in the Senate. The influential lobbying force that has for years scrambled for access to highly skilled foreign workers must now carry out a rough balancing act: making sure lawmakers know that the bill, as written, does not work for it, but that it doesn’t want to kill the process, either.
farm- drought- farm bill

Graphic: Five Things to Watch in the Farm Bill

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

5 Questions About That Obama IRS Mess

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

South Dakota Dems Lose Top Recruits

In less than a week's time, Democrats in South Dakota went from debating which of their top-tier candidates would run for retiring Sen. Tim Johnson's seat to wondering whether they'll be competitive at all. National Democrats long saw former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin as their strongest possibl...
Ob

Will the Benghazi and IRS Probes Do More Damage to Obama or the GOP?

Impeachment talk and multiple investigations recall the Clinton era that Obama promised to avoid.
Gabriel Gomez

In Massachusetts, Gomez Internal Poll Shows Close Race

Democratic Rep. Ed Markey holds only a narrow advantage against Republican Gabriel Gomez in the special election for Senate in Massachusetts, according to an internal poll from the GOP candidate’s campaign, the latest sign the blue state race will be more competitive than Democrats expected.
 Michele Bachmann

'Obamacare' Repeal: Will the 37th Time Be the Charm?

With tensions over fiscal issues building, and the three-month suspension of the nation’s debt limit set to expire Sunday, lawmakers this week will be rehashing on the House floor their messaging war over repealing President Obama’s three-year-old health care law.
Jennifer Cox

5 Staffers to Watch Among House Freshmen

Running an office of a freshman member of Congress is never easy, but certain lawmakers and their top aides have especially unique challenges. Meet the chiefs of staffs of five House members whose election to Congress is somehow notable or newsworthy.
Harvesting wheat crop

Congress Poised to Move on Farm Bill

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

The Border Hawks Have Already Won

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

Why Obama Can Ignore the House of Representatives

By courting senators and shaping public opinion, the president thinks he can pressure lower-chamber Republicans to accept bipartisan compromises. 

Poll: Which Senator Is Most Likely to Change His or Her Vote on Background-Check Legislation?

Democrats look to Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.
Joe Lieberman

GOP Leans on Lieberman in Boston Probe

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

Overhauling the Tax Code With 'Max and Dave'

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

Can Bipartisan Cooperation Save Us From Stalemate?

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

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

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

Heading Off the Coming Retirement Disaster

Half of Californians are on track to retire in or near poverty. The state's new retirement plan model could change that.
Joe Lieberman

Lieberman Backs GOP Line on Security Failures in Boston Marathon Attack

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

The Political War Over Think Tanks

The Heritage Foundation's fight with critics over its immigration report shows how politicized the battle over research has become.
Immigration markup

Immigration-Reform Advocates Sell Legislation in Judiciary Committee

Their biggest challenge is to win over rule-of-law conservatives on border enforcement.
Obama and Clinton

Why Benghazi is a Blow to Obama and Clinton

Both parties are wrong about the scandal: It’s not Watergate and it’s not nothing.
John Barrow

Senate Democrats Starting On The Defensive

Facing a difficult landscape in 2014, Democrats having trouble recruiting for Republican-held seats.
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.
Mark Sanford

Mark Sanford's Sex Scandal Survival Guide

The former governor violated all the rules of political comebacks, but he won a solidly-Republican seat anyway.
Senator Harry Reid

Senate Faces Test on Small-Ball Energy Bills

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., will soon have at his feet a small handful of bipartisan energy bills primed for passage, but whether he overcomes the politics that have felled similar efforts in past years is a lingering question.
Mark Sanford

With a Special Election Win, Mark Sanford Completes His Comeback

Overcoming the disgrace of a bizarre extramarital affair while he was governor of South Carolina, former Rep. Mark Sanford reclaimed a seat in Congress on Tuesday by winning a special election over Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch.
IMMIGRATION 508

Immigration Law May Be Tough on the Poor

Don’t expect Congress to dive too deeply into the politically unforgiving topic of how the United States treats poor people as it begins debating immigration legislation. But that question is always lurking beneath the surface.
Speaker of the House Rep. Nancy Pelosi

Obama to Host Dinner for Top House Democrats

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Sen. Mike Lee Speaks at CPAC

Alliances Tested as Immigration Amendments Roll In

Amendments to the Gang of Eight's bill were due by close of business Tuesday and already alliances are being tested among both members who support and those who oppose comprehensive immigration reform.    
President Barack Obama waves to U.S. troops at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, March 28, 2010.

Why It's So Hard to Trust the Chain of Command in Military Sexual-Assault Cases

A day after a high-profile arrest, a new Pentagon report shows sexual assaults have jumped by a third since 2010.
John Barrow

Barrow Won't Run for Senate As Dems Eye Backup

Rep. John Barrow, D-Ga., will not run for retiring Sen. Saxby Chambliss's seat in 2014, he announced in a press release this afternoon. "I enjoy my work on behalf of the folks in the 12th District, and I look forward to continuing to serve them in the House of Representatives," Barrow said. Barrow...
Rand Paul and Ted Cruz

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

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

Why Conservatives Are Divided on Immigration Reform

You could be excused for thinking it’s the world vs. Jim DeMint and the Heritage Foundation when it comes to immigration reform.
Jeff Sessions

Heritage Foundation Warns of Steep Costs of Immigration Reform

The Heritage Foundation released a study Monday saying that legalizing the current population of illegal immigrants could cost $6.3 trillion in entitlements and social programs in the long run. But the report came as no surprise, given that the conservative think tank issued a similar warning in 2007, and it’s unlikely to substantially change the fate of immigration reform in the Senate.
PEOPLE-Comics2

Life in Politics Can Be Comic

While tens of thousands of people make a living in politics, Darren Davis seems to have discovered a niche in political comics.
Retail Worker

Why an Online-Sales Tax May Not Help Brick-and-Mortar Retailers After All

Taxes are all about changing behavior, and legislation establishing sales taxes for Internet commerce, which is expected to pass the Senate on Monday, is no different. But it’s not clear that the online-sales tax will achieve its goal.
Dave Camp and John Boehner

Debt-Ceiling Fight May Flare This Week

House Republicans will push action on a bill signaling no retreat from their demand for spending cuts as a condition to any ceiling hike.
Marco Rubio

Marco Rubio: A Successful Salesman for Immigration Reform?

Recess has been tough for Marco Rubio.
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...

In Massachusetts, Kids Poll the Darndest Things

The first post-primary poll in next month's Massachusetts Senate special election was released Thursday, but while the survey carried the name of a prominent Boston university, it wasn't conducted by the school or its faculty. The automated poll was conducted by a newly-reinstated student group on c...
Stephane Herseth Sandlin

Herseth Sandlin Would Follow a Well-Trodden Path From Congress to K St. and Back

If former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin runs in South Dakota's open-seat Senate race, she'll no doubt have to fend off attacks about her time at a Washington lobbying firm. Following her 2010 reelection defeat, the Democrat joined Olsson Frank Weeda Terman Matz PC, before returning to South Dakota...
Guantanamo detention facility at dawn

Political Barriers Stand Between Obama and Closing Guantanamo Facility

Little has changed politically since the last time Congress rebuffed the president.
Reconcile Restaurant

The Cajun Comeback

Eight years after Katrina, New Orleans is finding new ways to address old problems. Scenes from a turnaround. 
Yvette Clarke, Charlie Rangel, Juamaane Williams

How Democrats Could Blow Immigration

In their zeal to reach an agreement with Republicans, party strategists risk alienating the usually reliable Black Caucus. 

Poll: What Are the Chances Congress Will Pass a Major Tax-Reform Bill?

A majority of Insiders say prospects are poor.
Jack Kingston

Tea Party Hopes for a Peachy 2014 in Georgia

Three open House races and an open Senate seat make Georgia one of the nation’s best opportunities.
Early Voting In Ohio

The Democratic Comeback To Voter ID

In Colorado, Democrats looking to liberalize voting laws to their advantage.
Lindsey Graham

Why Lindsey Graham's Support for Immigration Reform Isn't Popular in South Carolina

The Republican senator is still in solid position for reelection, but he has reason to worry.
Lamar Smith

Meet the Yahoo Caucus

Congress is filled with informal caucuses, from the Black Caucus to the Wine Caucus. I have a new one to propose, which might be among the largest: the Yahoo Caucus.
Max Baucus

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

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

Holcomb Considering Ga. Senate, Gubernatorial Bids

Georgia state Rep. Scott Holcomb says he is considering running for his state's open Senate seat in 2014, even as the Peach State's Democratic Party brass tries to narrow down the field to a single candidate. "It's fair to say that I'm thinking about it, and that's largely a function of many people...
Tense Obama

Is Obama's Legacy Great Leadership or Bad Breaks? Check the Sports Pages

An old baseball adage applies to the president: 'The great ones play above the breaks.'
Gabriel Gomez

Why Gabriel Gomez (Probably) Isn't Scott Brown

The general election matchup in the race to fill Secretary of State John Kerry's old Senate seat is set, and everyone wants to know: Is Republican Gabriel Gomez the next Scott Brown? The short answer: Probably not. The winner of Tuesday night's Republican primary has a compelling backstory, and Rep...
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.
Nick Rahall

Rahall Won't Run For Senate

Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., will soon announce he is running for a 20th term in the House, taking a pass on the race to replace retiring Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller, according to a statement obtained by Hotline On Call. "With U.S. Senator Jay Rockefeller retiring at the end of this term, it is m...
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.
FAA, Airport

Play of the Day: Fixing the Sequester

Fast forward to 5:25 to see the name of the bill.
Landrieu 2012 photo

What the Energy Panel Would Look Like Under Chairwoman Landrieu

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

With Amash and Rogers Mulling Senate Race, a Look at GOP's Potential House Hopefuls

While Rep. Gary Peters seems to have a clear path to the Democratic nomination, we still don't whether the GOP's Senate nominee in Michigan will be Rep. Justin Amash, Rep. Mike Rogers or someone else entirely. That doesn't mean it's too early to look at the possible House candidates should Rogers or...
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.
Gary Peters

Gary Peters To Announce Senate Bid

Rep. Gary Peters will announce this week that he's running to replace retiring Sen. Carl Levin, sources tell The Hotline, giving Democrats another top recruit in a state critical to their hopes of keeping the Senate next year.
Ed Markey

Ed Markey Will Face Gabriel Gomez in Massachusetts Senate Race

Markey, who has served in Congress since 1976, is the favorite to serve as the state's junior senator.
John Larson

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

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

A Playbook for Undoing the Sequester

When Congress voted last week to give the FAA more flexibility with its cuts, it set off a race among other special interests to push for exemptions. 
Senate Immigration

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

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

Landrieu Primed to Lead Energy Panel – If She Wins Reelection

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

Harkin: 'Religious Right' Scaring Off GOP Candidates

Retiring Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, on Thursday shared a "theory" as to why Republicans aren't lining up to run for his soon-to-be open Senate seat. They are intimidated, Harkin said -- and not by the Democratic opposition. "The religious right and the tea party people in Iowa have so cowed the moder...
FAA, Airport

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

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

Toomey Records Highest Approval Rating Yet After Sponsoring Gun Amendment

Though the background-check amendment co-sponsored by Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., failed last week to earn enough votes to be adopted, Toomey's standing among Pennsylvania voters is now at the highest point of his two-plus-year term, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll released on Friday. Too...
Marco Rubio

Special Interests Shadow Immigration Reform

Supporters are fending off charges that the legislation caters to the K Street crowd.
American dream

The American Dream, Downsized

The middle class now worries more about holding on for dear life than about climbing the ladder to riches. 
yucca mountain

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

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

In the Aftermath of Gun-Bill Loss in Senate, Liberals Put Incumbent Democrats on Notice

After last week’s failed gun-control vote in the Senate, in which a handful of moderate Democrats defected from their party, a coalition of progressive groups is warning those at-risk incumbents to start avoiding votes that make them look too conservative.
Mark Pryor

Why Bloomberg's Targeting of a Democratic Senator Could Backfire

To keep a Senate majority, Democrats may need Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor to stick around.
Syria

Obama Is Looking for Reasons to Delay Response to Syria's Chemical-Weapons Use

The White House is not eager to engage militarily in the Middle East again.
Dianne Feinstein

Senators Say Chemical Weapons in Syria Cross Obama's 'Red Line'

Senior senators -- now including Senate Intelligence Chairman Dianne Feinstein -- say Syria has used chemical weapons on its citizens, crossing the 'red line' President Obama put down as trigger for U.S. intervention.  
Shoes

America's Next National Security Risk: Footwear?

The keys to a strong military are coordinated intelligence efforts, high-tech weaponry, and good shoes – American-made shoes, that is, according to certain members of the sneaker lobby.
McCain at State of the Union

Schumer Thinks Senate Needs More Than 60 Votes for Immigration to Push House to Act

Just breaking up an expected GOP filibuster of immigration legislation may not be enough. 
Boston bombing memorial

5 Ways the Boston Bombings Altered the Political Debate

From immigration to drones, the attacks had an impact on the presidential agenda.

Mitch McConnell, Super Populist

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is a staid, understated politician. He doesn't give pulpit-pounding speeches, and he rarely electrifies an audience. That's what makes this video, released today by McConnell's campaign team, so remarkable. Remember those Tim Pawlenty videos folks compared to...
Colleen Hanabusa

Is Brian Schatz Already Winning Hawaii's Invisible Primary?

A competitive Hawaii Senate race is all but official. The Honolulu Star-Advertiser and other outlets reported Tuesday that Democratic Rep. Colleen Hanabusa has decided to challenge appointed Sen. Brian Schatz and try to make good on the late Sen. Daniel Inouye’s deathbed request that Hanabusa repl...
Capitol dome

The Week That Kicked Off The Battle For The Senate

Republicans in position to take back the upper chamber, if they can avoid self-destructive tendencies.
Arturo Rodriguez

Agricultural Workers and Farmers Unite to Push Congress on Immigration Reform

The sight of the head of the United Farm Workers and farmer representatives testifying side by side before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday to promote the farmworker section of the immigration-reform bill was an extraordinary moment in American agriculture.
McCain and Graham

Senators Focus on Information Breakdown in Boston Attack

In the wake of the Boston Marathon attack, lawmakers are focusing on whether federal law enforcement botched information it had about the deceased suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011 and whether post-Sept. 11 information-sharing security measures broke down.
Harry Reid

Round Two for Gun Control May Take a ‘Next Newtown’

A week after gun legislation suffered a stinging defeat in the Senate, an uncomfortable realization has settled over the Capitol that it will likely take another mass shooting or similar tragedy to reignite momentum for gun control.
Grassley

Immigration-Reform Opponents Lack Strategy

In the week since the “Gang of Eight” released its 844-page immigration bill, there have been three days of hearings featuring 26 witnesses. The compressed time frame has left opponents of the bill little time to read it, let alone formulate a strategy to alter the measure to their liking or kill it entirely.
Frank Guinta

Options Complicate N.H. GOP's Ballot Calculus

New Hampshire Republicans are engaged in a game of musical chairs: A host of familiar names are being linked to the 2014 gubernatorial, Senate and 1st District congressional races. Several of these potential candidates are considering running for more than one of these offices, and the decisions mad...
Long-term Unemployment Hearing

The Poorly Attended Hearing on One of the Economy's Toughest Problems

It stands to reason that lawmakers who often decry the high jobless rate would want to be seen publicly trying to tackle the problem, right? Well, apparently not.

Whitaker Prepares For Senate Bid While Awaiting King's Decision

Iowa Republicans may not have a Senate candidate yet, but former U.S. Attorney Matt Whitaker is readying to fill the void if Rep. Steve King takes a pass on the race. "It's smart to take steps to move forward no matter what [King's] decision is," Whitaker said. "At some point in time the race needs...
Immigrants out of the shadows

The 8 Senators Who Hold Immigration Reform in the Balance

A look at the positioning of key conservative senators and how the legislation is faring with the GOP base.
Gov. Brian Schweitzer

Brian Schweitzer, the Great Progressive Hope?

Montana's former Democratic governor is liberal on health care, but more conservative on guns.
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...
Brian Schweitzer

Democrats Need Working-Class Heroes to Keep Control of Senate

For Republicans, the Senate won't be won in the deep South. They'll need to pick off blue-collar Democratic states like Iowa, Minnesota and Michigan.
Barbara Buono

Poll: Buono Still Not Gaining Traction in N.J.

New Jersey state Sen. Barbara Buono is finding out that it's difficult to close a 30-plus-point gap in the polls when roughly four out of five voters don't know anything about you. A new Quinnipiac University poll released early Wednesday shows Buono, the almost-certain Democratic nominee in this y...
Max Baucus

What Will Max Baucus Do With His New Political Freedom?

The Montana senator's retirement could affect legislation on guns, taxes, immigration, and the debt ceiling. If only he'll agree with his fellow Democrats.
Marco Rubio

How Republicans Can Win Over Their Party on Immigration

It’s a combination of charm and fear tactics. Republican defenders of an immigration overhaul are talking up their ability to write into law a tough enforcement strategy.
Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan

Conservatives Come Out for Renewable-Energy Projects

Defying conventional wisdom in the era of Solyndra, conservatives in Washington are coming out to back renewable energy.
ap

Mark Pryor May Soon Have A Bloomberg Problem

Mayors Against Illegal Guns mulls months-long campaign against Democratic senator.
Graham

Obama’s Pick for Energy Secretary Blocked Over Cuts at S.C. Nuclear-Waste Plant

In his recent confirmation hearing, Ernest Moniz told senators that one of his very first trips as Energy secretary would be to Hanford, the troublesome nuclear-waste site in Washington state. But Moniz might be wise to detour down to South Carolina on his way in light of a move Tuesday by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to block his confirmation.
Nick Rahall at Energy Independence Press Conference

NRCC Recruiting Freshman State Legislator to Challenge Nick Rahall

Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., one of Republicans' top targets in 2014, may soon get his first challenger: The National Republican Congressional Committee is in the process of recruiting state Sen. Bill Cole to run for the seat. The NRCC sent staffers to West Virginia last week to meet with Cole, accord...
West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion

How Will Texas Explosion Impact Chemical Security Laws?

Industry officials 'appalled' by those who say the incident suggests a need for tougher chemical security laws.
Boston bombing memorial

The White House Is Right: Tsarnaev Should Be Tried As a Civilian

The only surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bomb case will be represented by counsel and arraigned, just like any other criminal defendant.
Lynch and Markey

Democrats Argue Over Who's Tougher on National Security After Boston Bombings

National security was a contentious topic at Monday night's Democratic debate.
Reid's picks: Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.

Max Baucus's Sudden Retirement Puts Pressure on Former Montana Governor

It's Schweitzer or bust for Democrats as they hope to hold a pivotal Senate seat.
Brian Schweitzer

Schweitzer Considering Bid For Baucus Seat

Senate Finance Committee chairman Max Baucus's decision to retire instead of seeking a seventh term further complicates Democratic efforts to keep control of the Senate -- unless the most popular Democrat in Montana decides to take a shot at the seat. Former Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer is "leanin...
Harry Reid

Reid Set to Push for Conference on Budget

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, is expected to ask the Senate for consent to move to a conference on the budget, according to a Democratic aide. 
James Carney

Get Ready To Be Taxed on Internet Purchases

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

Hydropower Bills Enjoy Bipartisan Support in Congress

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

Bob Corker Charts Leadership Course

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

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

Democrats, Gang of Eight members, are playing offense to prevent delays.
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.
Landrieu and Pryor

Two Southern Democrats, Two Different Votes on Guns

How gun votes will affect Sens. Mark Pryor and Mary Landrieu in 2014.
Michael Bennet

DSCC Outraises NRSC Again in March

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee outraised its counterpart, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, for the the third consecutive month, bringing in more than $5.2 million in March, according to figures provided by the committee. The NRSC raised almost $3.2 million for the month....
Mark Sanford voting

VoteVets Adds to TV Onslaught Against Mark Sanford

VoteVets Action Fund released a new television spot targeting former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford on Monday, adding to the Democratic onslaught against the Republican nominee, just two weeks before the special election in the state's 1st Congressional District. While recent ads by other Democ...
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.
AP618772796574

Previewing the Sunday Shows

Friday night's capture of the second suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing will be the prominent topic for the Sunday shows, including the national security implications of the attack. Sunday Meet the Press hosts Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., and Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin. Face the Nation h...
Boston Bombing Sustpects

Boston Suspect's Legal Status A Test Case

Nearly 12 years after 9/11, authorities still have not figured out how to try terrorists.
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? 
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA)

After Boston Marathon Bombings, What Next For Immigration Reform?

“We screwed up. We can’t afford to screw up again,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said on Friday. 

Inside the Cover: Who Wants To Run For Congress?

In this week's National Journal cover story, Shane Goldmacher looks at why anyone would want to run for Congress. In the video above, go inside the story with the author himself.
Rep. Steve King

King on Possible Senate Run: 'I Can See a Path to Victory'

Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, is still considering running for Senate, telling National Journal that he sees "a path to victory" in polling conducted on his behalf, but his "gut hasn't quite lined up yet." In an interview with NJ's Fawn Johnson, published in the new issue of National Journal, King says...
Rob Portman

Poll: Portman's Approval Rating Slips After Marriage Stance

Sen. Rob Portman's, R-Ohio, approval ratings have dropped marginally since he announced he supported same-sex marriage last month, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Friday. The poll shows Portman with 40 percent approval, while 31 percent of voters take a negative view of his job pe...
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. 
Ken Halterman

The Silver Lining in the Gun-Control Defeat

Advocates believe that, even though background checks failed in the Senate debate, public sentiment will eventually vindicate them. 
Boston Marathon bomings

The Boston Bombs Remind Us That We’re Not Safe

Just because law enforcement officials learned how to track terrorists doesn’t mean we’re not at risk. 
Raul Labrador

Just Don’t Call Him Marco Rubio

Raul Labrador will be even more important to immigration reform than the Latino Republican in the Senate. 
Barack Obama, John McCain

Why John McCain Is Barack Obama’s New Best Friend

The two have their eyes on history as they transcend years of friction. The upshot could be good for the country.
Senate Dems with Angus King

‘Independent’ in Name Only

He promised to chart his own course, but a National Journal vote analysis shows that Sen. Angus King of Maine aligns with Democrats. 
 Lake Borgne Barrier

Let’s Not Talk About Climate Change

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

Routes to a Budget Deal Appear Stalled

The two routes to an agreement—regular order or schmoozing—do not seem to be working, despite Washington's deep dive into fiscal issues.
Gabby Giffords

How Gabrielle Giffords and Michael Bloomberg Can Succeed on Guns

Small, determined interests win out over large, diffuse ones. But their task is not impossible.
NRA Protest

Why the Senate Vote May Signal 2016 Problems for the Gun Lobby

The outcome of Wednesday’s dramatic Senate vote on expanding background checks simultaneously demonstrated the difficult geography confronting gun-control advocates in the Senate and the potentially daunting math facing gun-rights proponents in the Electoral College.
Gregory Jaczko

Reid Appoints Besieged Regulator to Nuclear-Weapons Panel

Late in the evening on Wednesday, one of the busiest and most unnerving times Washington has seen in a long while, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid quietly appointed Gregory Jaczko, a controversial former nuclear-energy regulator to a key but obscure panel.
Obama

How Obama Misread the Politics of Gun Control

Reality check: Gun-control opponents hold the upper hand politically in 2014.
Pat Toomey

Gun Legislation Rejected in the Senate

The Senate on Wednesday rejected every single gun-related proposal put before it, even the bipartisan proposal to expand background checks to Internet and gun show sales.
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.
Pills move through a precision weighing machine

No Big Bills, But Plenty of Action on Health Care

The Energy and Commerce Committee won’t be passing any blockbuster health care bills this session—much as some GOP members would still love to repeal the Affordable Care Act—but several smaller measures on the agenda are likely to make it to the House floor.
100113_agriculture_496w.jpg

Long List of Lobbies Oppose Renewable-Fuels Standard

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

Time Looks Right for Permanent ‘Doc Fix’

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

Doctors Badly Want a Prescription for SGR

The sustainable growth rate formula that’s used for physician reimbursement under Medicare has been the top priority for doctors’ lobbies for years. The prospect of a permanent “doc fix” matters to them tremendously because it means certainty for physicians who have grown weary of worrying about looming pay cuts year after year.
Harry Reid

Democrats Search for Next Move After Major Gun Defeat

After the Senate dealt a blow to one of President Obama’s top second-term priorities, voting down a bipartisan measure to expand background checks on gun purchases, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid pledged that, “This was just the beginning.”
Rep. Fred Upton

A Polarized Congress Tests Fred Upton’s Instincts

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

Senate Fundraising Winners and Losers

The Senate map favors Republicans this cycle, but Democrats are off to a hot fundraising start. Here are our first-quarter winners and losers: Winners: Red State Democrats: To win back the majority, Republicans probably need to unseat a majority of the five Democratic incumbents seeking reele...
Baucus Enters Supercommittee Meeting

In-Cycle Dems Baucus, Begich, Pryor Oppose Background-Check Amendment

Three vulnerable Senate Democrats seeking reelection in 2014 joined most Senate Republicans in thwarting the bipartisan amendment mandating background checks for gun purchasers on Wednesday. The amendment -- introduced by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., along with Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa. -- earned 54 vote...
Gun Sale

The 5 Republicans Who Got Away on Background Checks

These GOP senators once looked like winnable votes in the gun-control showdown, but this week they emerged in opposition.
Suspicious letters

Letter Addressed to White House Tests Positive for Ricin

Law enforcement authorities said Wednesday morning that they have intercepted a second letter containing a substance testing positive for the poison ricin – this one addressed to the White House.
Rand Paul

11 Things We Learned About Rand Paul at Breakfast

Sen. Rand Paul, the Kentucky Republican and potential GOP candidate for president, chatted with reporters over scrambled eggs and sausage at a breakfast event hosted by the Christian Science Monitor on Wednesday. Here is what we learned.
potd417

Play of the Day: What Republicans Can Learn From BuzzFeed

Fast forward to 3:10 to see how Buzzfeed can draw inspiration from the NRCC.
Steve King

Observers Say King's Fundraising Points Away From Senate Run

If Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, is a soon-to-be Senate candidate, he isn't fundraising like one, and his latest Federal Election Commission reports have contributed to a growing buzz that the outspoken conservative will take a pass on his state's open-seat Senate race. To some political observers, the...
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.
Charles Chuck Grassley

Divide Emerges Among Immigration-Reform Opponents

Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee who have protested the speed and secrecy of the work of the bipartisan “Gang of Eight” are far from united in a strategy to slow or kill the immigration-reform bill—or even on whether that’s the plan at all.
Senator Tom Coburn

Time Running Short for Congress to Keep Student-Loan Rates From Doubling

Student-loan reform has emerged as one of the few bipartisan bridges in a budget battle marked by stark divides. But there is little agreement on solutions.
Guns

Senate Sets Wednesday Gun Vote

The Senate showdown on new gun-control legislation is officially set for Wednesday afternoon. 
McAuliffe

McAuliffe's $5-Million Quarter Gives Him Va. Cash Advantage

The $5.1 million raised by former Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe in the first quarter for this fall's Virginia gubernatorial election dwarfed the $2.4 million of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, the Republican nominee, during the same time period. McAuliffe also reported $5...
Rep. Henry Waxman

The ‘Liberal Bulldog’ Takes on His Biggest Challenge

Rep. Henry Waxman, the California liberal who has spent decades battling the tobacco, coal, and pharmaceutical industries, is taking on what appears to be the most insurmountable challenge of his long career.
Phil Gingrey

Kingston Outraises Ga. Senate Potentials, As Gingrey Maintains Cash Lead

Though he isn't officially in the race yet, Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., leads his colleagues seeking to replace Sen. Saxby Chambliss with an impressive $845,600 haul in the first quarter of the year. But his $1.75 million warchest puts him in the middle of the pack. Rep. Phil Gingrey, who officially...
Dianne Feinstein

Lawmakers Seek Answers on Boston Attacks

Congress is asking lots of questions and getting few answers so far about the Boston attack.  
Immigration rally

Deportees Can Come Back Under Draft Immigration Bill

Immigrants who were in the United States before Dec. 31, 2011 and were deported for noncriminal reasons could return to the country in a provisional legal status if they a legal spouse or child in the country or if they qualify for the Dream Act, according to a summary of the immigration bill slated to be unveiled this week in the Senate.
Marco Rubio

Immigration Reform Isn't Hurting Marco Rubio's Bottom Line

Though championing immigration reform is widely viewed as a political gamble for Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, it hasn't hurt his bottom line.
Fred Upton

House Energy Committee’s Redux Agenda

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

Still a Long Way To Go in Senate On Gun Control

Democrats were feeling pretty good last week after inking a bipartisan agreement on sweeping background checks for gun purchases and getting the votes to begin a Senate debate on new gun restrictions. But now they return to the Capitol at just the beginning of what will be a long, tough road to turn gun legislation into law.
Elizabeth Colbert Busch

Inside Elizabeth Colbert Busch's Private D.C. Fundraiser

Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman Steve Israel pledged full support to Elizabeth Colbert Busch's special election campaign in South Carolina at a private fundraiser in Washington on Monday evening. "I am here to tell you that we are in this race. ... In three weeks and two days s...
Nick Rahall at Energy Independence Press Conference

Senate Fundraising Roundup: The House Is Home?

With Monday's Federal Election Commission reporting deadline looming, we are getting an early glimpse at which potential Senate candidates in the House are already laying the groundwork for 2014 bids for the upper chamber -- and which are not just yet. Here, a look at the latter: Arkansas: Rep. Tom...
Gary Peters

Peters Raises $371K As He Considers Senate Bid

Rep. Gary Peters, D-Mich., started his 2013 fundraising by taking in $371,000 during the first quarter, a respectable sum for the potential Senate candidate but less than the $434,000 he raised in the first quarter of 2011. As Peters jostles for Democratic support with party power player Debbie Din...
Mike Rounds

After Fast Start, Rounds Raises $184K in First Quarter

Former South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds, saw his fundraising pace for the state's open-seat Senate race slow in the first quarter of 2013, the Argus Leader of Sioux Falls reported Monday. After hauling in $270,000 in the last month of 2012, Rounds raised just $184,000 in the first three months of 2013....
Corey Booker, Soledad O'Brien

Booker Reports Raising $1.9 Million in First Quarter

Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker hasn't officially launched his Senate campaign, but the Democrat posted an impressive first quarter fundraising haul, reeling in $1.9 million over the first three months of 2013. Booker finished March with more than $1.6 million in his federal fundraising account, acc...
Georgia Immigration March

5 Roadblocks to Immigration Reform

Even with bipartisan support in the Senate, immigration reform could stumble on its way through Congress.
Lindsey Graham

Lindsey Graham Boasts $5.4 Million for Reelection

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., will report raising more than $1.1 million in the first quarter of 2013, and ended March with nearly $5.4 million in the bank for his reelection, his campaign tells Hotline On Call. Graham is considered vulnerable to a primary challenge from the right this cycle, partic...
Bruce Braley

Braley Has $1 Million On Hand, As Republicans Seek A Senate Candidate

Just more than two months into his Senate campaign, Rep. Bruce Braley, D-Iowa, has a million-dollar head start as Republicans seek to find his opponent. Braley raised $1.07 million in the first quarter of 2013, $856,875 of which came from his nascent Senate committee. The remainder was raised by hi...
Warren

Why Evangelicals Back Obama on Immigration (and Why They Should Agree on Guns and Climate Change, Too)

Pragmatic mega-church leaders are savvy about demographic shifts.  
bob goodlatte

Forget Working Groups, House Judiciary Moving Immigration on its Own

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

Slow-Motion Gun Battle Plays Out in Senate

Lawmakers will stage some slow-going drama this week as the Senate proceeds in its deliberations on gun-control legislation with a series of votes on amendments—many of them likely to usher in their own mini-floor fights, or even filibusters.
New U.S. citizens are sworn-in at an induction ceremony in Pomona, Calif., in January.

Why a Messed Up Immigration Bill Could Still Pass

Only one thing really matters in the immigration bill that a bipartisan group of eight senators will unveil this week—11 million immigrants living in the United States without papers who fear deportation every day. Give them a break, and the rest will sort itself out.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller

Insiders: Rocky, Johnson Retirements Viewed As Most Damaging

Democratic members of National Journal's Insiders panel said this week that West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller's retirement was most damaging to their party's prospects of retaining the seat. The Insiders Poll asked which 2014 Senate retirement hurt the incumbent party the most, with nearly half of...
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