2015년 2월 9일 월요일

The Hill's E-news: February 9, 2015


The Hill's E-news
 February 9, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
Obama prepares for divisive veto
By Laura Barron-Lopez
President Obama is just days away from issuing the biggest veto of his tenure, with Republicans poised to send him legislation that would authorize construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.
Hillary vs. Warren would split Hollywood celebs
By Judy Kurtz
The lines are already being drawn in the fight for La La Land’s love.
Labrador spoiling for fight on immigration
By Juan Williams
OPINION | Labrador is uniquely positioned in the debate.
And the band played on
By Judd Gregg
OPINION | Are there no adults in the halls of the Capitol?
This week: Immigration and Keystone top agenda
By Cristina Marcos
Congress will send a Keystone bill to Obama and look for a path on DHS spending.
Sunday show wrap-up: ISIS fight dominates
By The Hill staff
Attention also turned to 2016 presidential race and DHS funding.
Obama honors 'gentleman' Dean Smith
By Kyle Balluck
The college basketball coaching legend died Saturday in North Carolina.
Police, race emerge as signature focus for AG nominee
By Tim Devaney
As the nation’s top cop, Attorney General nominee Loretta Lynch appears likely to make cooling the simmering tensions between police and the black community a signature issue.
Holder: Visit to Ferguson 'put a certain damper' on frustrations
By Jesse Byrnes
"All things were not cured," the attorney general added.
TV host asks Holder to quack like a duck
By Jesse Byrnes
MSNBC's Melissa Harris-Perry told the attorney general that fans call him "The Duck."
It's about time we take decisive action against ISIS and terrorism
By Zach Wamp, contributor
It's time to roll up our sleeves and work together to defeat terrorism.
Under GOP plan, pay more for junk insurance, leave more uninsured
By Richard Kirsch, contributor
The plan would result in tens of millions of Americans losing health coverage.
The Wall Street Journal: Coming budget poses test for GOP 
By Nick Timiraos and Kristina Peterson
Republican leaders drawing up the party’s budget document empowered will face a challenge negotiating a budget conservative enough to pass the House without proposing politically unpopular cuts.
Reuters: Unusually large Republican 2016 field sparks 'staff primary' 
By Steve Holland
With a dozen Republicans thinking seriously about running for president in 2016 and 10 more talking up the idea, it's a good time to be an experienced campaign hand.
The Washington Post: GOP field wide open in Iowa as moderates stake their caucus claims
By Robert Costa
Social conservatives dominated the state’s caucus in the last two presidential years, but 2016 looks like a free-for-all.
The New York Times: Rand Paul seeks middle (Sorry, dad)
By Jeremy W. Peters
As he works to build a broad national following, Senator Paul is trying to stitch together very disparate worlds.
The Associated Press: In age of campaign mega-groups, solo spenders still compete
By Catherine Lucey
Christine Jones admits she didn't know how much running for office would cost.


The Hill | 1625 K Street | NW Suite 900 | Washington | DC | 20006

댓글 없음:

댓글 쓰기