Bill Clinton’s ever increasing role in the presidential campaign has stirred much discussion. Has an ex-president ever taken so aggressive a part in his party’s nominating contest?
After weeks of threats, arguments and a secret session thrown in for good measure, the House on Friday passed a controversial bill to renew the administration's electronic surveillance program. Unlike the Senate-passed version, however, the lower-chamber's proposal would not give the phone companies amnesty for crimes they may have committed in cooperating with the program in past years without a judicial order. The House vote was 213 to 197.
House and Senate leaders now must meet to hash out the differences between the two bills. But as House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) pointed out this afternoon, even Democrats don't believe the immunity language is likely to survive the process.
The White House has said that legal immunity is vital to entice the telecom industry to participate in the program in the future. Roughly 40 lawsuits have been filed against the companies on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union and others who argue that the warrantless wiretapping program violates the Fourth Amendment. Despite the threat of those suits, however, all the companies have agreed recently to cooperate in the program.
Thanks to the Daily News for pointing out what really mattered about Elton John's fund-raiser for Hillary Clinton at Radio City Music Hall: what other celebs were on hand for the big event.
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It's not often that Washington Republicans will go out of their way to attack the world's largest oil supplier and Bush administration ally, Saudi Arabia. But that's precisely what three GOP House members did yesterday in an attempt to prevent a planned $123 million arms sale to the strategically placed monarchy.
While Sen. John McCain is busy bolstering his friend-of-the-military image in the Middle East this week, Democratic Sen. Jim Webb is calling on the GOP presidential nominee to show similar troop support at home by endorsing a proposal to update the GI Bill, The Hill's Roxana Tiron reported today.
While 50 senators (including nine Republicans) have joined Webb in supporting the proposal, McCain has yet to do so, despite entreaties
from Webb. Webb spokeswoman Kimberly Hunter said that having McCain on board would "bring more
Republicans over to support the bill."
As Florida Sen. Bill Nelson (D) made headlines Thursday for floating the possibility of a Democratic primary do-over, Michigan's Democrats are approaching the topic with similar gravity but lighter steps.
Both Michigan and Florida bumped their Democratic primaries forward this year, and both suffered the wrath of the Democratic National Committee, which stripped them of their nominating convention delegates. Nelson responded Thursday with a letter to DNC Chairman Howard Dean, asking that either Florida's delegates be reinstated or the national party fund another primary election. If neither request is met, Nelson warned, the Democrats would run a greater risk of losing the state in November's presidential race.
As presidential hopeful Barack Obama shifts his focus from the primary contest to the general election, he's trumpeting his support for a congressional proposal to extend education benefits to post-9/11 vets -- and reminding voters that the likely GOP nominee, John McCain, opposes the same plan.
Rep. Solomon Ortiz (D-Tex.) is talking about costs in terms of readiness. Petraeus replied that there’s another component of readiness: "How much more that our troopers get it about what it is we’re doing." In other words, the troops are better equipped to understand and execute a counterinsurgency strategy.
The possibility that former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura could step into this year's tight Senate race is worrying state GOP officials, the Minnesota Monitor reported yesterday.
Ventura -- a former professional wrestler, sometime actor, sometime author, and all-around character -- is currently promoting a new book, "Don't Start the Revolution Without Me." But he's made clear that he's satisfied with neither the incumbent, Sen. Norm Coleman (R), nor his challenger, former Saturday Night Live comedian Al Franken (D).
In an interview with CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer on Monday, Ventura skewered both candidates as unfit for the job:
BLITZER: Let's talk about Minnesota, your home state. You were the governor of Minnesota. There's a very important Senate contest that's going to happen this year, Al Franken, the comedian, now a serious Democratic politician, vs. the incumbent, Norm Coleman. Who do you support?
A War, a Democracy and a Vice President
By Mike Lillis 03/24/2008Lest anyone think that criticism of Vice President Dick Cheney's now-infamous contempt for public opinion surrounding the Iraq war is a partisan contrivance, former GOP congressman Mickey Edwards had a revealing piece in The Washington Post Saturday, arguing that executive branch recognition of public sentiment in wartime is not just in everyone's interest, it's also the administration's constitutional duty.
And on the Sixth Day, the Intelligence Programs Plunged Into Uncertainty
By Mike Lillis 02/22/2008 | 3 Comments
For House Democrats, who left Washington last week without acting on legislation to expand White House spying powers, Attorney General Michael Mukasey has a few words of caution: The nation's intelligence programs, he wrote in a Feb. 22 letter (pdf here) to House Intelligence Committee Chairman Silvestre Reyes (D-Tex.), are now officially plunged into uncertainty due to your inaction.
And We Thought Hitchens Was Tough on Kissinger
By Mike Lillis 05/09/2008On a slow, rainy Friday in Washington, when all eyes are on presidential politics, this little gem arrived over the ticker courtesy of Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Speaking at the Brookings Institution Monday, Gates said:
Bush Budget Largely Irrelevant In Lame-duck Year
By Mike Lillis 02/04/2008Bush kicked off the 2009 budget debate with a $3.1 trillion spending wish list that calls for significant hikes in military funding while scaling back on health care, environmental and low-income assistance programs.
Frank's 'Mea Culpa' Over Credit Card Waivers
By Mike Lillis 04/18/2008
A month ago we reported on the silencing of consumer witnesses scheduled to testify before a House subcommittee on credit card reform, charging that it was the GOP minority responsible for the gagging. Yesterday, at a hearing of the same subcommittee on the same topic, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) confused the issue a bit by announcing a "mea culpa" over the incident.
GOP Gags Witnesses on Credit Card Woes
By Mike Lillis 03/14/2008 | 14 CommentsRepublicans on a consumer credit subcommittee required witnesses to waive privacy rights to their financial history before testifying about run-ins with credit card companies.
GOP May Push to Keep Abstinence Requirement in Africa AIDS Bill
By Mike Lillis 03/12/2008
Tomorrow morning, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will meet to mark up legislation providing roughly $50 billion over the next five years to combat AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in Africa. Among the virtues of the bill, according to aid workers and clinicians, is the elimination of a current law requiring at least one-third of all federal AIDS prevention dollars to Africa to go toward abstinence programs.
In Chase v. Udall, the Company Responds
By Mike Lillis 04/25/2008
Yesterday, Rep. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) accused banking giant JPMorgan Chase of violating a confidentiality agreement with one its customers, Susan Wones, who had come to Washington this month to testify on credit card reform. Our post ran in the afternoon before the company had responded.
Influential Lewis Drops Clinton for Obama
By Mike Lillis 02/27/2008
As if things weren't going bad enough for Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, Georgia Rep. John Lewis (D) has dropped his support for the former first lady and instead endorsed rival Barack Obama, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Wednesday.
Mail-In Vote to Cure Florida Primary Woes?
By Mike Lillis 03/11/2008
In the Wall Street Journal yesterday, Florida Sen. Bill Nelson (D) proposed what he calls a "practical" way to resolve his state's Democratic primary mess: A revote featuring mail-in ballots.
One Weekend; One Dramatic Change of Heart
By Mike Lillis 03/17/2008 | 1 CommentIt was the same man talking, but the message sure changed in 72 hours.
Speaking at the Economic Club of New York Friday, President George W. Bush warned that there are limits to government intervention in markets:
I guess the best to describe government policy is like a person trying to drive a car on a rough patch. If you ever get stuck in a situation like that, you know full well it's important not to overcorrect. Because when you overcorrect, you end up in the ditch.