2015년 3월 12일 목요일

The Hill's E-news: March 12, 2015


The Hill's E-news
 March 12, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
House Republican leaders mull $174 billion Medicare vote
By Sarah Ferris
House Republican leaders are considering a vote next week on legislation that would abolish cuts to Medicare payments, a policy change that could cost upwards of $174 billion to enact.
GOP: We won't relent on Clinton emails
By Cristina Marcos
Congressional Republicans are looking to put pressure on Hillary Clinton over her controversial private email server.
Dems: Case closed on Clinton emails
By Mike Lillis and Jonathan Easley
Congressional Democrats are circling the wagons around former secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the face of escalating attacks from Republicans over her use of a personal email account in the Obama administration.
Two police officers shot in Ferguson 
By Kyle Balluck
The officers were apparently targeted during a protest following police chief's resignation.
Market turmoil threatens Obama’s economic success
By Peter Schroeder
The U.S. economy is finally chugging along, but a resurgent recovery is bringing its own set of challenges that could complicate the president’s record on an issue that has dominated his time in office.
GOP governors scramble for answers on ObamaCare
By Peter Sullivan
Republican governors are scrambling to come up with a response if the Supreme Court cripples ObamaCare, leading to a tangle of divergent views that could make it tougher for the GOP to rally around a single solution.
Republicans cast a wary eye at new round in immigration fight
By Bernie Becker
Senate GOP leadership is staying away from a proposal to ensure undocumented immigrants don’t get tax break payouts from the government, with the party still smarting from a battle over Department of Homeland Security funding.
House GOP looks for chairwomen
By Scott Wong and Cristina Marcos
When House Administration Committee Chairwoman Candice Miller retires and hands over her gavel next year, GOP leaders will be facing a familiar quandary: finding another female lawmaker to lead a committee.
Sestak's determined Pennsylvania march
By Cameron Joseph
COATESVILLE, Pa. — Neither snow nor rain — nor cranky Democrats nor oncoming semi-trucks — will stop Joe Sestak from marching across Pennsylvania.
A woman in the White House in 2017? It’s likely
By Jessica Taylor
With Hillary Clinton as the Democrats’ heavy favorite, Republicans will be feeling pressure over the next year to pick a woman as their No. 2.
GOP fault lines form in Web fight
By Mario Trujillo
Some House Republicans are refusing to fully endorse a compromise on net neutrality floated earlier this year by their party’s committee chairmen.
Hillary Clinton's 'matter of convenience' 
By Cedric Leighton, contributor
Those words prove that Clinton does not really understand the Cyber Age in which we live.
How Tip O'Neill and Ronald Reagan would make this Congress work 
By Former Rep. Charlie Stenholm (D-Texas), contributor
The former president and Speaker allowed compromise to happen, and got a lot done.
Reuters: Republican high hopes for balanced budget face Senate battle 
By David Lawder
A major goal of the new Republican-led U.S. Congress, passing a balanced budget, could be in jeopardy amid disagreements within the party over easing constraints on defense spending.
The Washington Post: Iran grabs 2016 spotlight, as GOP contenders embrace hard line
By Ed O’Keefe and Mike DeBonis
Lawmakers have been using their Capitol Hill perches to raise concerns and force potential rivals to pile on from afar.
The New York Times: Democrats see no choice but Hillary Clinton in 2016
By Nicholas Confessore, Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman
As Hillary Rodham Clinton prepares to run for president again, amid much criticism, Democrats across the board are counting on her to restore the party’s luster.
The Wall Street Journal: Some Democrats see the risk of having one candidate 
By Janet Hook and Kristina Peterson
Hillary Clinton’s handling of questions about her email provides fresh ammunition not just to Republicans but people in her own party who are concerned she could win the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination without being challenged in a primary race.
The Associated Press: 2016 politics: White House chooses its fights - when it can
By Jim Kuhnhenn
President Barack Obama used to say 2012 was his last election. Then, in 2014, he hit the road for some Democrats in friendly states and called it his last campaign. Now, like it or not, he can't shake 2016.

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