2015년 3월 5일 목요일

The Hill's E-news: March 5, 2015


The Hill's E-news
 March 5, 2015 
The Hill's E-news
Hillary’s penchant for secrecy rattles Dems
By Niall Stanage
Democrats are rattled by the deepening furor around Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email account while she served as secretary of State.
Hillary Clinton: ‘I want the public to see my email’
By Kyle Balluck
A brief, oddly timed tweet marks the first time she's weighed in on controversy.
Likely 2016 GOP hopefuls recast immigration views
By Jonathan Easley
Prospective Republican presidential hopefuls are going to great lengths to recast their immigration pasts.
EPA chief races to finish landmark climate rules
By Laura Barron-Lopez
Gina McCarthy tells The Hill she's "busier than [she's] ever been."
Few clues from Roberts on fate of ObamaCare
By Sarah Ferris
The Supreme Court appeared deeply divided Wednesday on whether to curtail subsidies under ObamaCare, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy providing few clues about where they might fall.
Keystone veto override fails
By Laura Barron-Lopez
The Senate failed on Wednesday to override President Obama’s veto of legislation approving the Keystone XL oil sands pipeline, falling five votes short of the two-thirds majority needed in a 62-37 vote.
House, Senate drafting separate budget plans
By Rebecca Shabad
Republicans in the House and Senate plan to release separate budget blueprints this month, creating the potential for conflict as they head into a new fiscal battle with President Obama.
US ambassador attacked in South Korea
By Ben Kamisar
The American ambassador to South Korea has been rushed to the hospital after an apparent attack Thursday, the State Department confirmed.
Senate votes to block union election rule
By Tim Devaney
Congressional Republicans opened a new front Wednesday in their fight against Obama administration regulations, with the Senate voting to strike down a contentious rule meant to speed up union elections.
Dems to McConnell: We'll vote no on Iran next week
By Kristina Wong
Senate Democrats co-sponsoring a critical Iran bill say they will vote against their own legislation when Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) brings it up for a vote next week.
Md. House Dems on Senate crash course
By Jonathan Easley
Nearly every Democratic member of the Maryland House delegation is strongly considering a run for retiring Sen. Barbara Mikulski's (D-Md.) seat, they told The Hill on Wednesday.
An opportunity to make transparency the norm at the FCC
By Scott Wallsten, contributor
Lack of transparency is so normal that the agency can't imagine it any other way.
The FDA overreaches with new food label
By Sherzod Abdukadirov, contributor
The agency essentially assumes an average American cannot distinguish between soda and juice.
The Wall Street Journal: Senator Reid scores early victory as opposition leader 
By Siobhan Hughes and Michael R. Crittenden
Senate Democrats think they have had a good couple of weeks, including a win in a battle over immigration and homeland security funding, but their leader is warning members of his caucus against taking any victory laps.
The New York Times: A mark of status for Clinton’s inner circle 
By Amy Chozick and Steve Eder
A domain name set up for Hillary Rodham Clinton shielded her correspondence and was used for coveted accounts that conferred prestige and closeness to the secretary of state.
The Associated Press: Clinton emails inject Obama administration into 2016 fray 
By Josh Lederman
Hillary Rodham Clinton's use of private email has thrust the Obama administration into the 2016 presidential campaign fray, forcing the White House to defend - or at least explain - the former secretary of state's conduct.
The Washington Post: Amid Clinton controversies, Democrats yearn for an alternative 
By John Wagner
Martin O’Malley tries to step into the breach as he heads to New Hampshire this weekend.
Bloomberg: Marco Rubio has lots of ideas, but few legislative victories 
By Michael C. Bender
The potential presidential candidate touts a robust policy agenda, but many of his big ideas haven't been turned into legislation.

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