2015년 3월 16일 월요일

The Hill's E-news: March 16, 2015


The Hill's E-news
 March 16, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
Nancy Pelosi, Democrats chart their own path for 2016
By Mike Lillis
Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and House Democrats are poised to launch their own messaging strategy ahead of the 2016 elections.
Boehner's sea of troubles
By Juan Williams
OPINION | The expanded GOP House majority has caused more problems for Speaker.
A recipe for chaos
By Judd Gregg
OPINION | Direct congressional meddling in monetary policy would lead to disaster.
This week: Human trafficking, Lynch top agenda
By Cristina Marcos and Jordain Carney
The Senate will try to move forward on a trafficking bill and attorney general nomination.
McConnell will delay Lynch unless Dems cooperate on trafficking bill
By Alexander Bolton
Democrats have threatened to block the measure over abortion language.
Author of Iran letter has 'no regrets at all'
By Alexander Bolton
Sen. Tom Cotton accused Obama of "not negotiating for the hardest deal possible."
Sunday show wrap-up: Iran dominates
By The Hill staff
Discussions also turned to Loretta Lynch and Hillary Clinton's emails.
5 big hurdles for the GOP's budget blueprint
By Rebecca Shabad
House and Senate Republicans are about to face their next major test in the majority: approving the same budget blueprint.
White House makes aggressive legal push on immigration
By Jordan Fabian
The administration wants to win the battle over executive actions — and fast.
The legal case against Internet rules
By Mario Trujillo
Lines of attack are emerging, as opponents look to challenge the FCC’s landmark Web rules.
US foreign policy at a crossroads, looking forward and back
By Joe Barnes, contributor
Obama's two recent trips abroad sum up the hope and disappointments of his foreign policy.
Will Washington kick rural America when it's down?
By former Rep. Larry Combest (R-Texas), contributor
A serious deterioration of the farm economy could happen if the farm bill is altered again.
The New York Times: Chasm grows within GOP over spending
By Jonathan Weisman
Fiscal hawks who are determined to maintain strict spending caps oppose defense hawks who are threatening to derail any budget that does not ensure an increase for the military.
The Associated Press: 5 things to know about Congress' budget debate
By Andrew Taylor
Congress' annual budget debate pits Republicans against Democrats as the newly empowered GOP in the House and Senate offer their alternatives to President Barack Obama's budget. A primer on the key terms and players helps navigate through the complex, arcane process:
The Wall Street Journal: Clinton taps Hispanics for likely White House bid 
By Peter Nicholas and Laura Meckler
Hillary Clinton has been seeking Hispanics for important campaign spots as part of an effort to blunt a potential Republican general-election threat and duplicate President Obama’s success in wooing a fast-growing voting bloc.
Reuters: Sen. Ted Cruz attacks Obama during New Hampshire visit 
By Dave Sherwood
Senator Ted Cruz, the conservative Texas Republican considering a run for the presidency, lashed out at President Barack Obama during a visit to New Hampshire on Sunday, saying his administration had repeatedly trampled on the Constitution.
Bloomberg: At SXSW, Rand Paul makes play for young voters and 'the leave me alone coalition' 
By David Knowles
While many of his rivals spent the weekend scouting for support in the traditional electoral hunting grounds of New Hampshire, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul headed south by southwest, instead.

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