Topic: Congress

What You Missed During Today's Abortion Hearing In The House

REUTERS

If you were wondering why anti-abortion advocates were so keen on getting Gosnell into the news cycle this spring, look no further than HR 1797: the reintroduced "D.C. Pain Capable Unborn Protection Act," which some lawmakers hope to institute on a national level. 

When Wearing the Wrong Shoes Can Get You Bounced in the Capitol

Due to vague guidelines, security guards at the Capitol spend a lot of time making judgment calls on clothing.

Comments | 2,641 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

May 7, 2013

Mark Sanford Is a Winner Once Again

The Associated Press and CNN have both called the special election for South Carolina's first congressional district for Mark Sanford, the once-disgraced former governor who's proven that even redemption has partisan leanings.

Comments | 5,963 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

May 6, 2013

Internet Sales Tax Passes in the Senate But That Was the Easy Part

A battle royale is brewing on Capitol Hill after a bipartisan coalition in the Senate handily passed the Marketplace Fairness Act, the controversial bill that would impose a sales tax on Internet purchases.

Comments | 1,410 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

May 5, 2013

Somehow, Mark Sanford Is Ahead in the Polls and Could Actually Win

Something strange and extraordinary happened to Mark "The Comeback Kid" Sanford over the past couple of weeks: He made a comeback — and a serious one at that.

Comments | 3,212 Views

By Justin Elliott, ProPublica

Apr 30, 2013

After Being Named Banking Chairman, Congressman Vacations with Bankers

In January, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, ascended to the powerful chairmanship of the House Financial Services Committee. Six weeks later, campaign finance filings and interviews show, Hensarling was joined by representatives of the banking industry for a ski vacation fundraiser at a posh Park City, Utah, resort.

Comments | 591 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

Apr 22, 2013

Despite Years of Protest, an Internet Sales Tax Suddenly Seems Imminent

An overwhelming majority of Senators just voted to cut the debate short and get a final vote on a controversial bill that will impose sales tax on purchases made on the Internet.

Comments | 2,137 Views

By Philip Bump

Apr 10, 2013

Congress Insists That You Get Mail on Saturdays, Like It or Not

The short version of the news from the U.S. Postal Service today is that you're still going to get mail on Saturdays this fall. The long version is that federal budgets are far from set in stone, open to interpretation, and always up for dispute.

Comments | 1,104 Views

By Philip Bump

Mar 27, 2013

Louie Gohmert Can Park Wherever He Wants Because Congress

According to Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas, his position on the House Natural Resources Committee gives him dominion over all of the government agencies that body manages. Or, at least, their parking spaces.

Comments | 1,927 Views

By Philip Bump

Mar 27, 2013

All Congress Needs to Do to Get People to Like It: Its Job

There are a few lessons for Washington in the new ABC/Washington Post poll released today. One is that (non-Republican) people still like Obama. The second is that one option for Congress to turn its horrible ratings around would be for it to actually do something.

Comments | 525 Views

By Philip Bump

Mar 15, 2013

What the Makeup of Congress Might Say About the Rob Portman Effect

If it takes personal association with a minority group for members of Congress to act on their behalf, perhaps an overview of the demographics of Congress can provide some insight into our political debate. Here's how it breaks down, by gender, ethnicity, net worth, and sexual orientation — in charts.

Comments | 2,931 Views

By Philip Bump

Mar 7, 2013

Rand Paul Talked About Drones More in One Day Than Congress Ever Has

During the first seven hours of his filibuster yesterday, Rand Paul used the word "drone" in a military context more than any two-year Congressional term in history — and more than it had been used in the Congressional Record prior to the 112th Congress, combined.

Comments | 6,349 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Feb 26, 2013

Spendocalypse, Soon

The Political Math Behind Obama's Plan to Blame the GOP for Everything

Despite his promise today that he's "not interested in playing a blame game," polls suggest that doing just that would be a very effective strategy for President Obama.

Comments | 1,460 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Feb 21, 2013

The State of the Gun Laws Is Gridlocked

More than a week after President Obama demanded that gun violence victims "deserve a vote" on new legislation, members of Congress across the country don't appear to be budging, from Connecticut to Colorado.

Comments | 1,450 Views

By J.K. Trotter

Feb 15, 2013

Jesse Jackson Jr. Facing 5 Years in Jail for Fancy Watch, Michael Jackson Gear

After resigning from Congress in November and finally confessing that he spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds on (some seriously weird) luxury goods, Jesse Jackson Jr. will plead guilty on new federal charges and could face considerable jail time.

Comments | 3,966 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Feb 15, 2013

Two Weeks Before Sequestration, Congress Takes a Vacation

Senate Democrats claim they struck an "agreement" that would head off the looming sequestration cuts, but since the deadline is 14 days away and Congress is in recess for the next ten, you probably shouldn't hold your breath.

Comments | 5,690 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

Feb 5, 2013

Chris Hughes's Husband Is Running for Congress

Just three days after his husband Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes relaunched The New Republic, 26-year-old investor and activist Sean Eldridge filed papers to run for a seat in the House.

Comments | 4,591 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Jan 23, 2013

Clinton's Benghazi Testimony Will Be Her Last Act as Secretary of State

Before Hillary Clinton ends her tenure at the State Department she'll deal with one final piece of unfinished business today—answering Congress's questions about the Benghazi attack.

Comments | 616 Views

By J.K. Trotter

Jan 18, 2013

Stephen Colbert's Sister is Running for Congress, but Will He Campaign for Her?

The giddy speculation about campaign theatrics might be misplaced. Even if a family face-off with Mark Sanford sounds "awesome."

Comments | 6,208 Views

By J.K. Trotter

Jan 15, 2013

Mark Sanford Is Running for Congress — and Marrying His Argentinian Lover

The decision to run "came out of the blue, for all the obvious reasons."

Comments | 2,005 Views

By J.K. Trotter

Jan 15, 2013

Inside Today's Sandy Relief Bill That's Not All About Sandy Relief

Today the House will finally voted on the long-delayed second half of a federal relief bill that allocates approximately $51 billion for damage wrought by Hurricane Sandy.

Comments | 2,675 Views

By Esther Zuckerman

Jan 11, 2013

Chart of the Day

The Day Jobs of the 113th Congress

Here's a breakdown of the official (non-Congressional) professions of the 113th Congress, farmers and ranchers included.

Comments | 2,806 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Jan 2, 2013

Boehner Buckles: After Contentious Day, House to Vote on Portion of Sandy Relief

It was supposed to be the day everyone breathed easy after the House finally (if temporarily) staved off a fiscal nightmare. Then House Speaker John Boehner faced a torrent of criticism for shutting down a vote on a federal relief bill for Hurricane Sandy victims before the Congressional term finished, and by the time everyone headed home for the day, he appeared to have given in.

Comments | 5,140 Views

By Connor Simpson

Jan 1, 2013

Cliff Diving

Eric Cantor Really Hates the Senate's Cliff Deal

Speaker of the House John Boehner's job today was to try and sell House Republicans on the fiscal cliff deal hammered out by the Senate in the wee hours of last night. Eric Cantor is certainly making that as hard as possible. 

Comments | 12,242 Views

Fiscal Compromise Would Set Stage for a New Year of Mini-Cliffs

The downside is that the new package shoves many of the tough decisions about long-term tax and spending policy into January and February, when lawmakers will face the debt ceiling.

Comments | 1,897 Views

By J.K. Trotter

Dec 28, 2012

Stat of the Day

Congress Has Held Up 170 Super-Easy Confirmations for No Reason

Making the rounds Friday was Norm Ornstein's updated essay on the horrors of our slow-moving Congress, which still — still! — cannot strike a deal on the impending fiscal cliff.

Comments | 4,360 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Dec 28, 2012

Inside the First Gun-Control Bill the GOP Might Actually Like

A House Democrat will introduce a bill next Thursday limiting high-capacity magazines that lacks GOP support right now, but that supporters hope "would be a smaller concession for gun-rights advocates than a broader assault weapons ban."

Comments | 5,059 Views

By Connor Simpson

Dec 20, 2012

Yep, Mark Sanford Is Actually Making a Comeback

The rumors were true. Mark Sanford -- the former South Carolina Governor who likes hiking and adultering -- is going to make a run for the soon-to-be-vacated House seat in his former state. 

Comments | 2,069 Views

By Connor Simpson

Dec 20, 2012

Barney Frank May (or May Not) Delay His Retirement

Frank wouldn't confirm or deny whether he would accept a short-term appointment to replace Sen. John Kerry, should Kerry be appointed Secretary of State, and before other candidates line up for a special election next spring. 

Comments | 983 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

Dec 12, 2012

Cliff Diving

Pretty Much Everyone Favors Tax Hikes for the Wealthy to Avoid the Fiscal Cliff

The latest poll numbers show that a record number of Americans favor raising taxes on the rich as a solution to our budget problems. With the fiscal cliff just weeks away, one question remains: Who cares?

Comments | 3,074 Views

By Esther Zuckerman

Dec 10, 2012

Trimming the Times

The Congressional Class of 2013, McAfee's Blessing, and the End of Tebowmania

A summary of the best reads found behind the paywall of The New York Times.

Comments | 172 Views

By Jen Doll

Dec 6, 2012

'Lunatic' Removed from Federal Law, 'Idiot' Allowed to Stay

Here's your semantic government news that reads a bit like an Onion article of the day. But what's it all about, really?

Comments | 1,259 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Dec 6, 2012

John Kerry's McCain Joke Just Got the Jon Stewart Seal of Approval

As Stewart points out, the only good thing to come of the UN disability vote was the moment when we got to see Senate rivals John McCain and John Kerry troll each other and maybe go a little too far with the jokes.

Comments | 7,744 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Dec 5, 2012

Jon Stewart and the Real House Wife of the House of Representatives

The one woman Republicans appointed is in charge of what sounds like mundane busy work, and basically that makes Miller, as Stewart puts it, a "House wife."

Comments | 1,667 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Dec 4, 2012

Cliff Diving

Who's the GOP Fighting for on the Cliff?

A newly released poll shows that the 53 percent of Americans would blame Republicans in Congress if a fiscal cliff agreement isn't reached. Obviously, that's more than the 1 Percent they're fighting for.

Comments | 2,443 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Nov 30, 2012

Boehner Makes Up for Appointing All Old White Men with Single Old White Female

After Republicans filled every House leadership position with old white dudes, Speaker of the House John Boehner changed course on Friday afternoon by adding some diversity — emphasis on the "some."

Comments | 2,586 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Nov 30, 2012

Jon Stewart and the Fiscal-Cliff Asteroid

We didn't need Jon Stewart to tell us how silly it is for Washington to threaten our economy with another downgrade. We need him to show us how silly this whole thing is making the rest of us.

Comments | 2,565 Views

By Esther Zuckerman

Nov 20, 2012

Trimming the Times

The College of the Future, Banned Nativity Scenes, and Plugging Sandy

A summary of the best reads found behind the paywall of The New York Times.

Comments | 1,136 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Nov 20, 2012

Allen West Finally Gives Up the Fight

Two weeks after the chaos of Election Day has faded, Politico reports that Florida Representative Allen West has finally conceded his Congressional race to opponent Patrick Murphy. 

Comments | 3,268 Views

By Adam Clark Estes

Nov 19, 2012

Reddit Is Literally Writing Our Laws Now

Just when you thought Reddit couldn't become more powerful, Rep. Zoe Lofgren has enlisted the power of the crowd to help her write a new Internet law. It's right up Reddit's alley, too.

Comments | 12,166 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Nov 14, 2012

Cliff Diving

The Fiscal Cliff Isn't Actually a Cliff, by the Way

The latest trend in Fiscal Cliff analysis is to point out that it's not actually a cliff at all.

Comments | 689 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Nov 14, 2012

Luke Russert's Question for Pelosi Would Have Gone Over Better if Luke Russert Didn't Ask It

Poor Luke Russert got cut off at the knees today after he asked Nancy Pelosi if her old self was blocking a younger generation of Democrats from attaining power. But did he have a point? Yes, he did. The thing is, though, Luke Russert isn't allowed to ask that kind of question. 

Comments | 8,259 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Nov 14, 2012

Luke Russert's Lesson of the Day: Do Not Call Nancy Pelosi Old

After a few days of exclusive meetings with top House Democrats, Nancy Pelosi announced that she was staying on a House Minority Leader for the next congressional term. We also (by way of Luke Russert) have learned: that you should never, ever, call Nancy Pelosi old in the middle of her press conference. 

Comments | 4,019 Views

By John Hudson

Nov 5, 2012

Election Predictions Are Passé. Let's Talk Post-Election Predictions

Let's face it: The 2012 election is so passé. Voting may be less than 24 hours away but the media has moved on to bigger and better things: Like what's going to happen after the presidential election?

Comments | 2,280 Views

By John Hudson

Oct 24, 2012

Congress Seeking a Way to Call the Whole Fiscal Cliff Off

Call it the partial fix to the partial fix to the partial fix. National Journal's Dan Friedman and Billy House report that leading lawmakers are discussing a plan to make a "down payment" of cuts that would amount to half of the $110 billion in sequestration, which is set to go into effect in January.

Comments | 1,675 Views

By John Hudson

Oct 15, 2012

Jesse Jackson Jr. Is the Target of a Criminal Investigation for Home Decorating

In what's shaping out to be a pretty dreadful year for Jesse Jackson's Jr., the Chicago congressman who has been on medical leave for bipolar disorder is now the subject of a criminal investigation for misusing campaign money to spruce up his house. 

Comments | 3,643 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Oct 8, 2012

Lucky for Congress, Blatant Conflict of Interest Is Still Perfectly Legal

While insider trading is banned in Congress, it's still completely legal for lawmakers to sponsor bills that could benefit the businesses and industries or their family members have invested in, and according to The Washington Post, 73 congressmen and women have figured out how to use this loophole—a jump from the 16 they found when they published this study in February.

Comments | 2,490 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Sep 28, 2012

U.S. Postal Service Can't Pay the $5.6 Billion It Owes (Again)

The United States Postal Service has announced that it will default on a $5.6 billion loan payment due this Sunday but is insisting it's totally Congress's fault.

Comments | 795 Views

By Dashiell Bennett

Sep 11, 2012

Congressional Candidate Forced to Drop Out Over Voter Fraud Allegations

Wendy Rosen, the Democratic nominees for Maryland's 1st Congressional District, is withdrawing from the race after allegations that she may have cast votes in more than one state during two previous elections.

Comments | 5,713 Views

By Alexander Abad-Santos

Sep 10, 2012

Congress Gets Back to Doing What it Does Best: Nothing

The past two weeks of party conventions and all of the speeches, dresses, and dazzle that politics and politicians have enjoyed are now over, and now our elected representatives will finally roll up their sleeves and get to what we pay them for: hearings which will get nothing done, bills eliciting meaningless votes, and a possible adjournment. 

Comments | 508 Views

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