2015년 1월 22일 목요일

The Hill's E-news: January 22, 2015

The Hill's E-news
 January 22, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
Democrats hope GOP platform will help them woo millennials
By Mike Lillis
House Democrats think the GOP’s agenda has given them a new opportunity to win over millennials ahead of 2016.
GOP conservatives lambaste McConnell on immigration
By Scott Wong
House conservatives are taking aim at a new target: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.
‘Fast track’ splits Dem lawmakers
By Vicki Needham and Mike Lillis
Trade war is erupting between Democrats and Obama administration over passing legislation.
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House GOP changes abortion bill after revolt
By Cristina Marcos
House Republicans to vote on alternative measure that prohibits federal funds for abortions.
Senate votes that climate change is real
By Laura Barron-Lopez
Only Sen. Roger Wicker, the chairman of the Senate GOP campaign committee, voted "no."
GOP pans push for paid leave
By Cristina Marcos
Democrats say paid sick leave, nearly universal among industrial countries, is a no-brainer.
Clinton plans to astound, intimidate with fundraising ‘like nothing you’ve seen’
By Amie Parnes
Dennis Cheng is seen as likely leader of Clinton finance team.
The $5 billion presidential campaign?
By Amie Parnes and Kevin Cirilli
The 2016 White House race has the potential to crush previous spending records.
Cruz, Obama agree on mission to Mars
By Alexander Bolton
You may have to go to Mars to find common ground between Sen. Ted Cruz and President Obama.
The new war over Wall Street
By Peter Schroeder
President Obama and Republicans are on a collision course over regulations.
2015 offers a net neutrality solution 
By Robert Atkinson, contributor
Advocates of strong legislation should know it won't get any better than this.
We've all seen this Romney movie before 
By Chris Spatola, contributor
Does the result in 2012 mean 2016 will have the same ending?
USA Today: Conservatives at odds over border security bill
By Erin Kelly
The House Homeland Security Committee approved a $10 billion border security bill Wednesday, but it is already under attack by conservatives who say it could be the first step toward giving legal status to undocumented immigrants.
The Wall Street Journal: White House, Congress clash over Iran sanctions 
By Jay Solomon, Michael R. Crittenden and Carol E. Lee
U.S. lawmakers from both parties vowed to push ahead with sanctions legislation targeting Iran, ignoring the president’s warning that it could upend more than a year of nuclear diplomacy.
The Washington Post: Foreign policy foray signals new strategy for Republicans
By Greg Jaffe and Paul Kane
The direct outreach to Israel’s prime minister offers a glimpse of how Republicans plan to use their control of the House and Senate to steer policy.
The New York Times: Fueling speculation, Romney and Jeb Bush will meet 
By Jonathan Martin
The private meeting scheduled this week between Mitt Romney and Mr. Bush raises the possibility that the two former governors will find a way to avoid competing presidential campaigns that would split the Republican establishment next year.
Reuters: Most in New Jersey doubt Christie would be good president: poll 
By Jonathan Allen
Nearly three in five registered voters in New Jersey do not think their governor, Republican Chris Christie, would make a good U.S. president, according to a poll released on Thursday.


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