2015년 2월 23일 월요일

The Hill's E-news: February 23, 2015

The Hill's E-news
 February 23, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
Congress faces five-day deadline for funding Homeland Security 
By Rebecca Shabad
Lawmakers will begin returning to Washington on Monday with only five days left to prevent a shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
This week: Will Congress avoid a DHS shutdown? 
By Cristina Marcos
Education reform and college savings plans are also on the agenda on Capitol Hill.
McConnell fails to deliver 
By Juan Williams
OPINION | The Senate, unfortunately, is back to business-as-usual.
Politics shines in Oscar spotlight 
By Judy Kurtz
Political talk dominated some of the most memorable moments from the Academy Awards.
Lawmakers applaud Patricia Arquette’s wage equality call at Oscars
By Judy Kurtz
"It's time to have wage equality once and for all," Patricia Arquette said in acceptance speech.
Snowden documentary wins Oscar
By Julian Hattem
Director Laura Poitras thanks Snowden in her speech.
Warren now all in on fiduciary fight
By Kevin Cirilli
Obama on Monday will move ahead with plans to impose new regulations on financial advisers.
Giuliani: Obama comments 'hit a nerve'
By Kyle Balluck
“I said it maybe 30 times before,” Giuliani told a New York radio host.
Sunday show wrap-up: Giuliani dominates
By The Hill staff
DHS funding and the 2016 race for the White House also shared the spotlight.
McCain: ‘I’m ashamed of my country’
By Kyle Balluck
The senator called a ceasefire agreement between Ukraine and Russia "shameful."
GOP health plan would leave many low-income families behind
By Andrea Flynn, contributor
It raises more questions than it answers.
The Washington Post: Congress split over battling Islamic State
By Paul Kane
Lawmakers want to show unified support for military engagement, but the only real agreement so far is that Congress must be more forceful in foreign affairs.
The New York Times: Obama’s expected Keystone pipeline veto is likely to be the first in a wave
By Michael D. Shear and Coral Davenport
President Obama’s veto of the pipeline bill this week, the third and most significant one of his six years in office, would most likely be followed by others.
Reuters: Local bankers emerge as Fed ally in fight against audit bill
By Jonathan Spicer
Local bankers are joining the fight against a congressional proposal to audit the U.S. Federal Reserve's policy decisions, with more expected to lobby against the bill if it gains traction in Washington.
USA Today: GOP candidates weigh in: Does Obama love America?
By Catalina Camia
For a second week, the question of whether President Obama loves America continues to be asked of the Republicans with their eye on the White House.
The Wall Street Journal: Biden’s trips fan 2016 race speculation
By Colleen McCain Nelson
Vice president keeps supporters guessing on whether he will challenge Hillary Clinton in 2016.

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