Showing posts with label Senate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Senate. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Senate leaders give floor time to vulnerable Dems

Mark Pryor, Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu and Mark Udall are shown in a composite. | AP Photos

Mark Pryor, Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu and Mark Udall are all at risk in 2014. | AP Photos





Top Democrats are putting something special together for their Senate colleagues in tough races this year: a vulnerable-incumbent protection program.


At-risk senators will get to beef up their back-home cred by taking the lead on bills and amendments tailored to their campaigns. And they won’t be stuck in the back row at news conferences but will be in front of TV cameras and taking center stage during Senate debates.







It’s all part of an effort to blunt a furious Republican midterm campaign centered on attacking President Barack Obama and Democrats in the Senate who supported his signature health care law.


(PHOTOS: Senators up for election in 2014)


Leaders are coalescing around giving Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor the lead on a bill to protect the Medicare eligibility age, which has become a key issue in his race. Kay Hagan will tout her fight for long-term unemployment benefits rejected by the GOP-dominated North Carolina Legislature and her likely opponent, statehouse Speaker Thom Tillis. And leaders hope to give Jeanne Shaheen a triumph on energy efficiency, a bipartisan breakthrough that would play well in purple New Hampshire.


There are other, more narrowly tailored options that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and his lieutenants could consider. Hagan has a bipartisan deal on a sportsman’s bill to shore up her hunting cred, while Colorado’s Mark Udall and Louisiana’s Mary Landrieu want to fast-track U.S. natural gas imports — a key industry in their states.


“We try to showcase our members who are up for reelection so they have a chance to shine and show what they believe in, why they are seeking reelection in their states,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). “I think it helps a lot.”


Other possibilities include bequeathing a veterans bill to Montana’s John Walsh, who served in the military, and taking up manufacturing legislation from Delaware’s Chris Coons. And Democratic leaders still haven’t ruled out a vote on proposed fixes to Obamacare championed by red-state Democrats, despite reluctance to do anything to undermine the law.


One of the most intense election-year pushes comes from Pryor, who wants to prevent House Republicans from raising the eligibility age of Medicare above 65. In Arkansas, he has repeatedly attacked GOP opponent Rep. Tom Cotton for supporting a conservative budget that would gradually raise the eligibility age to 70. Now he stands to get a vote on his own bill to build on those broadsides.


“People are concerned about that. And we have over 500,000 people in our state who are on Medicare, and it’s a very important part of their lives. And so we want to protect it and not let some folks — especially on the House side — try to fundamentally alter it,” Pryor said.


A spokesman for Cotton’s campaign shot back: “Anyone who voted for Obamacare, as Sen. Pryor did, can’t credibly claim to be ‘protecting Medicare.’”


The strategy isn’t just pursuing overtly partisan ideas to appeal to the Democratic base — though there’s plenty of that — but also about forcing Republicans to help some of their biggest Democratic targets score legislative victories.


Shaheen’s energy efficiency bill with Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) is on a shortlist of bipartisan proposals Reid may bring up by this summer. It may have sufficient GOP support to avoid a repeat of last fall, when a push by Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) on an Obamacare amendment tanked the bill, thanks to revisions made to incorporate ideas from both parties.


One senior Senate GOP aide stressed that such bipartisan measures still face an uncertain fate because Democratic leaders don’t want to vote on Republican energy amendments, including on the Keystone XL pipeline. And in an election year that tilts toward the GOP, some Republicans will be all too happy to stymie bipartisan bills that might help Democrats keep the Senate.


“Does that happen? Sure it does. I think we know that,” said Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee ranking member Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, a Shaheen-Portman supporter. “Sometimes people look at who the author is, and look at whether or not they’re running, and then decide whether they’re even going to look at the bill.”


Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) blamed election-year politics for preventing lawmakers during the previous Congress from passing a bill to increase access for hunters, anglers and other sportsmen — in part because his stewardship of the bill looked good back in Montana.


“Unfortunately, people thought that if they passed that, I’d win the race in Montana. Guess what? I won it anyway,” Tester said in an interview. “It needs to pass because it’s a good bill. Has nothing to do with politics.”


This time, the lead Democratic sponsor of sportsman legislation is Hagan, who is targeted by the GOP. Hagan introduced a bipartisan compromise in early February with Murkowski that is cosponsored by a swath of vulnerable Democrats and deal-seeking Republicans.


Hagan will have something even more state-specific to tout Monday when the Senate passes its unemployment bill. Democratic leaders slipped in Hagan’s language to restore long-term unemployment benefits to North Carolina that fell out of federal compliance — aid that expired under the watch of state House Speaker Tillis.


Though energy issues often divide Democrats, leaders also want to help Landrieu, the newly installed Senate Energy and Natural Resources chairwoman, claim a legislative win for her energy producing state. Landrieu passed a popular Senate bill to rein in rising flood insurance rates in Louisiana, but so did her chief GOP opponent, Rep. Bill Cassidy, accentuating the need for her to capitalize on a fortuitously timed leap to the chairmanship.




POLITICO – Congress



Senate leaders give floor time to vulnerable Dems

Daily Kos Elections Senate Power Rankings: Inaugural April edition

Kay Hagan meeting with constituents
Sen. Kay Hagan (D-NC) is in one of the major races making waves.


As the election cycle continues to heat up as we head into Spring, it is time here at Daily Kos Elections to add a new feature. What you are about to peruse is our take on the Power Rankings concept.

But let’s start off by being clear on what this is not. It is not a simple “here are the 10 races that are most likely to flip” list. Because, with all due respect to the fine efforts of Natalie Tennant and Rick Weiland, even loyal DKE readers are going to get pretty bored seeing West Virginia and South Dakota grace the top of the list month-after-month.


It is also not a “who won the week/month” pundit-fest. Those kinds of subjective festivals of “instant analysis” are often driven by some pretty inane crap. Sure, Bruce Braley did himself no favors over the past two weeks, but does it merit the breathless “ZOMG! GAME CHANGER!” stuff we have seen? Doubtful. If you’re skeptical of that dismissal, I’d ask you this: remember how Barack Obama was supposed to be doooooooomed by the “clinging to guns and religion” comment?


There is actually an objective rubric for our list, by the way. But, if you want the specifics, and the inaugural power rankings in the battle for the Senate majority, you’ll have to head past the jump.




Daily Kos



Daily Kos Elections Senate Power Rankings: Inaugural April edition

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Senate panel votes to declassify CIA report

Dianne Feinstein is shown. | AP Photo

Dianne Feinstein heads to the closed-door meeting on Thursday. | AP Photo





The Senate Intelligence Committee voted on Thursday afternoon to declassify a 480-page summary of a report on the Central Intelligence Agency’s detention and interrogation programs.


Senate Intelligence Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said the documents show the CIA “made serious mistakes that haunt us to this day” in the agency’s efforts to track down those responsible for the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.







“The purpose of this review was to uncover the facts behind this secret program, and the results were shocking,” Feinstein said. “The report exposes brutality that stands in stark contrast to our values as a nation. It chronicles a stain on our history that must never again be allowed to happen.”


(PHOTOS: Dianne Feinstein’s career)


The committee agreed to declassify the report in a narrowly divided 11-3 vote, with Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) voting present. The decision marked the culmination of a five-year investigation by the Senate panel that studied how the CIA treated more than 100 detainees. It comes at a time of heightened tension between some lawmakers and the CIA after Feinstein recently accused the agency blocking the committee’s investigation.


Feinstein said that the documents contain details about CIA mismanagement of its Bush-era interrogation programs and exposes “major problems” regarding the intelligence community’s interactions with Congress and the White House.


“The release of this summary and conclusions in the near future shows that this nation admits its errors, as painful as they may be, and seeks to learn from them,” Feinstein said. “We are acknowledging those mistakes, and we have a continuing responsibility to make sure nothing like this ever occurs again.


The report now goes to the White House, where President Barack Obama must review it before its public release. The panel’s Republicans also plan to eventually release minority views on the report, which is expected to critique how the report was gathered.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Senate panel votes to declassify CIA report

Monday, March 31, 2014

Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

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Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

Friday, March 28, 2014

California senate suspends three Democratic lawmakers in criminal probes

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California senate suspends three Democratic lawmakers in criminal probes

Thursday, March 27, 2014

At Bat: Senate, On Deck: House

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At Bat: Senate, On Deck: House

Senate advances jobless aid

The U.S. Capitol is pictured. | AP Photo

House leadership has no intention of bringing the proposal to a vote. | AP Photo





The Senate took a key step forward on renewing expired unemployment benefits, voting to open debate on a bipartisan measure on Thursday afternoon.


The 65-34 vote was a significant breakthrough, putting the Senate on a glide path to final passage next week.







But Speaker John Boehner has indicated he has no intention of putting the proposal on the House floor, citing concerns about implementation and a dearth of job-creation provisions in the package. Some Senate Republicans forged ahead anyway, despite Boehner’s opposition.


(Also on POLITICO: GOP: Pope’s no liberal)


“I hope if we can get a good vote over here, then [Boehner] will take another look at it,” said Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins.


Working closely with Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Collins and GOP Sens. Dean Heller of Nevada, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mark Kirk of Illinois, Rob Portman of Ohio agreed with Democrats to restore through May long-term jobless benefits that expired on Dec. 28. That Republican support ensured that the bill could clear a 60-vote hurdle in the Senate, a significant breakthrough after a similar package fell just one vote short in February and other measures suffered numerous false starts this year.


“We are finally on our way to getting this much needed assistance into the hands of job-seekers, but there needs to be a real sense of urgency,” Reed said after his triumphant vote.


(Also on POLITICO: 5 senators flout Boehner on job aid)


The five Republican deal-cutters got far more support than previously expected, with ten Republicans ultimately blessing the bill’s advance, including Sens. Bob Corker of Tennessee, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Dan Coats of Indiana, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania. Many of those Republicans are from blue or purple-tinged states that can expect competitive reelection bids in future years.


The strong GOP support was even more remarkable given that Ayotte and Coats dropped out of the bipartisan negotiations earlier this month — and Coats had predicted he would oppose the deal because it did not include his suggested reforms. Still, Republicans will likely demand votes on some amendments next week and if Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) does not allow them, Republicans may slow passage of the bill and GOP support could shrink.


The $ 10 billion effort is paid for by extending U.S. Customs Service fees and changing federal pension laws. The bill also includes a boost for job placement programs and prohibits millionaires from obtaining jobless benefits.


“It’s worth … moving forward with an extension that’s paid for, that has some reforms initially that offers the promise of further reforms, which is why I’m supporting it,” Portman said.


Despite the strong showing on Thursday the vast majority of Senate Republicans still believe the bill’s reforms don’t go far enough. They opposed the legislation, including lawmakers from other high unemployment states like Mississippi and Arizona.


“It is an issue [on which] we need to have fundamental reforms. And to just keep throwing money at the problem, is that reform?” said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who wants the entire system rewritten, similar to the welfare reform overhaul in the 1990s. “We’ve got to improve the system.”




POLITICO – Congress



Senate advances jobless aid

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The Iowa Senate Race Just Got Interesting



In a campaign primary season where the eyes of Democrats are vigilantly trained on Tea Party challengers across the country to see which one will be the first to self-immolate with a “Todd Akin moment,” the award for the first major gaffe goes to one of the Democrats’ own.


In Iowa, Bruce Braley is running to replace progressive champion Sen. Tom Harkin, who is retiring after five terms.  Braley has been representing the state’s 1st Congressional District since 2007, but he is also a lawyer who, before running for Congress, served as president of the Iowa Trial Lawyers Association. It was this connection to his former life that got him in trouble on Tuesday.


Addressing a closed-door fundraiser in Texas, Braley wooed a group of fellow trial attorneys by citing his legal background, and in the process took a rather condescending shot at Iowa’s sitting Republican senator:


To put this in stark contrast, if you help me win this race, you may have someone with your background, your experience, your voice, someone’s who’s been literally fighting tort reform for 30 years in a visible and public way on the Senate Judiciary Committee, or you might have a farmer from Iowa who never went to law school, never practiced law, serving as the next chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Because if Democrats lose the majority, Chuck Grassley will be the next chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.



A couple of obvious points Braley apparently forgot from Politics 101: First, it’s generally not a good idea to disparage the background and livelihood of a significant portion of your state’s constituents. Second, there is no such thing as a “closed-door” or “private” fundraiser anymore. Candidates must assume the camera is always on—because it usually is.


Sometimes it’s done surreptitiously, as was the case with Mitt Romney’s notorious “47 percent” remark. On other occasions an intrepid journalist manages to infiltrate the campaign’s barriers, which was the case in 2008 when then-Sen. Barack Obama held forth on “bitter” rural Americans who “cling to guns or religion … as a way to explain their frustrations.” At this point it’s not clear which category Braley’s YouTube moment falls into.


Braley attempted to perform triage with a swift apology in which he lauded his family’s farming background—apparently they didn’t all go to law school—as well as his professed love of the farming way of life in general. But some damage has been done.


Not too long ago, the Iowa Senate race was considered beyond the reach of the GOP. Braley has no primary opposition, while Republicans are facing a wide-open primary with no marquee candidate.


And, since Obama came on the scene, Iowa has been trending Democratic. Obama’s success in there in 2008—he won by 9.5 percentage points—was less problematic for Republicans than his recapturing the state in 2012. Many conservatives felt Iowa was ripe for the taking, and the Romney campaign responded by pouring millions into it only to lose to Obama by six points. The result left Republicans wondering on Election Night whether Iowa had turned more Democratic “blue” than they’d previously thought.


But Obama’s second-term struggles, and the resulting decline in his approval rating, have brought a number of races back into play for Republicans, possibly including Iowa. Although the latest poll of the race, taken by Quinnipiac at the beginning of March, shows Braley maintaining healthy leads over all four potential GOP challengers, he is only at 40 percent support, and one-in-four voters remain undecided.


There’s an interesting twist to the story, too. Braley’s gaffe may well benefit GOP challenger Jodi Ernst who, coincidentally, this week released her first television ad, which touts her farming background. In the spot, which Charles Cooke of National Review quipped has “the greatest opening line in the history of campaign commercials,” Ernst declares, “I grew up castrating hogs on an Iowa farm.” (The line also impressed Sarah Palin, who endorsed Ernst on Wednesday.)


All the normal caveats apply, of course. Election Day is still a long way off, and Republicans won’t even have a nominee until the June 3 primary. But keep an eye out for the next round of polls in this race to see how much Braley may suffer for his gaffe. There are a number of interesting Senate races this year and, at least for the time being, Iowa just made its way up the list.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



The Iowa Senate Race Just Got Interesting

Monday, March 24, 2014

Condoleezza Rice Backs Sullivan in Alaska Senate Race



Condoleezza Rice has joined the midterm election fray, backing a former State Department colleague running for the U.S. Senate in Alaska. In a video sponsored by the influential conservative super PAC American Crossroads, Rice touts the credentials of Republican Dan Sullivan.


“Dan Sullivan is tireless in service for his country,” the former secretary of state says in the 32-second TV spot.


Sullivan served as Alaska’s attorney general under Govs. Sarah Palin and Sean Parnell. Prior to that, he was assistant secretary of state for economic and business affairs during part of Rice’s tenure heading the nation’s diplomatic arm.


The video—a $ 180,000 ad buy, according to American Crossroads—features Rice defending the GOP challenger against recent attacks against him by Put Alaska First, a PAC supporting the incumbent, Democratic Sen. Mark Begich.


One attack ad, titled “Sullivan’s Real Home,” charges the candidate with being insufficiently Alaskan for having been born and raised in Ohio and  for owning a million-dollar home in a “swanky D.C. suburb” while claiming voter residency in the 49th state.


In response, Rice says Sullivan “faces political attacks because he wanted his family by his side,” adding, “Remember that serving our country required some time in our capital. Dan will be a great senator because he loves and cares for the state of Alaska and because he’s a great family man.”


Sullivan is vying with Alaska Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell for the GOP nomination. A new Rasmussen poll shows Sullivan and Begich tied in a hypothetical matchup, and Treadwell leading the incumbent by four percentage points.


Though Rice has campaigned for candidates in the past—most prominently for 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney—this is apparently the first time the Stanford professor has done so in a television ad.


It is a reunion of sorts for Rice and another former Bush administration official: American Crossroads’ co-founder Karl Rove was a senior adviser to the president.




Jose R. Gonzalez is an intern for RealClearPolitics.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Condoleezza Rice Backs Sullivan in Alaska Senate Race

Tea Party v. Establishment Fight May Intensify if GOP Regains Senate

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Tea Party v. Establishment Fight May Intensify if GOP Regains Senate

FOCUS | Nate Silver: Republicans Favored to Take Senate

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FOCUS | Nate Silver: Republicans Favored to Take Senate

Friday, March 14, 2014

S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

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S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

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S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

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S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

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S.C. State Senate Unanimously Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA – McCain to GOP: Don’t call yourselves ‘Reagan Republicans’ – ST. PADDY’S DAY LUNCH -- Senate strikes deal on jobless aid – HOUSE FIGHTS OVER ISSA AND iPADS


A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA: RUSSIA MASSES TROOPS ON BORDER – In Moscow, Steven Lee Myers and Alison Smale report on A1 of the New York Times: “With a referendum on secession looming in Crimea, Russia massed troops and armored vehicles in at least three regions along Ukraine’s eastern border on Thursday, alarming the interim Ukraine government about a possible invasion and significantly escalating tensions in the crisis between the Kremlin and the West. The announcement of the troop buildup by Russia’s Defense Ministry was met with an unusually sharp rebuke from Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, who warned that the Russian government must abandon what she called the politics of the 19th and 20th centuries or face diplomatic and economic retaliation from a united Europe.” http://nyti.ms/1lC5b2G


SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY is meeting today in London with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, in an attempt to ease tensions before Sunday’s vote. While testifying on Capitol Hill Thursday, Kerry warned that Russia will face an immediate, “very serious series” of responses from the U.S. and Europe if it annexes Ukraine’s Crimea region. AP: http://bit.ly/1ikGNlZ


– U.S.: NO ARMS FOR UKRAINE … YET – “Ukraine’s interim government has appealed for U.S. military aid, including arms, ammunition and intelligence support, according to senior U.S. officials. But the Obama administration has agreed to send only military rations for now, wary of inflaming tensions with Russia. …” Adam Entous reports on A1 of the Wall Street Journal. The U.S. “wants to show support for Ukraine’s interim leaders without further antagonizing an unpredictable Moscow or inadvertently emboldening the Ukrainian military to take steps that could spark violence. ‘It’s not a forever ‘no,’ it’s a ‘no for now,’’ a senior U.S. official said of Ukraine’s request for lethal military support.” http://on.wsj.com/Nd0kIY


– McCAIN TO GOP: DON’T CALL YOURSELVES ‘REAGAN REPUBLICANS’— Seung Min Kim writes for POLITICO: “Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) ripped fellow Republicans on Thursday for objecting to a package of aid and sanctions to respond to the Ukrainian crisis, calling himself ‘embarrassed’ and telling his GOP colleagues: ‘Don’t call yourself Reagan Republicans.’ The Senate has erupted in a dispute over provisions related to the International Monetary Fund in the Ukraine bill, as conservative Republicans protest that it is an unnecessary component of the package that passed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on a bipartisan vote this week.” http://politi.co/Ob2o5j


– U.S. markets tumbled Thursday over worries about the Ukraine crisis and a slowdown in China. The Dow fell 231.19 points or 1.4 percent. Reuters: http://reut.rs/Ob7r5R


** Presented by RepealSGR.org: Congress has bipartisan/bicameral legislation to repeal the SGR and reform the Medicare physician payment system. This new system will be sustainable, fair and efficient, secure patient access, and encourage quality, affordable care. Republican and Democratic Leadership in Congress need to continue working together to develop bipartisan pay-fors. www.repealsgr.org


SENATORS REACH DEAL TO EXTEND JOBLESS BENEFITS – Burgess Everett writes for the hometown paper: “Senators struck a bipartisan deal on Thursday to revive expired long-term jobless benefits following months of dramatic stops and starts on the issue. After an afternoon of frantic negotiations, five senators from each party announced a deal that should finally deliver 60 votes necessary for the aid package to pass the Senate, barring procedural snags. … The negotiations were led by Sens. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Dean Heller (R-Nev.), each hailing from states with high unemployment. …


– “It will be awhile before the package sees a vote. The jobless aid package will be considered in late March after the Senate returns from its St. Patrick’s Day recess — though Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said aid to Ukraine will be the first order of business on March 24. And the legislation still must go through a conservative House, where aides to Speaker John Boehner declined to offer an assessment of the Senate deal on Thursday.” http://politi.co/1qC74ju


– Keeping with the spirit of bipartisanship, senators also passed two measures dealing with flood insurance and federally subsidized child care, writes the Washington Post’s Wesley Lowery and Ed O’Keefe: “The Senate voted 72 to 22 Thursday to pass a flood insurance bill that will roll back sharp premium increases to homeowners that were implemented as part of a federal overhaul of the flood insurance program. … Earlier Thursday, senators voted 96 to 2 to reauthorize a child-care development block-grant program and make several changes to improve the quality of federally subsidized child care.” http://wapo.st/1gw9CHW


OBAMA CALLS FOR DEPORTATIONS REVIEW – Seung Min Kim and Reid J. Epstein report for POLITICO: “President Barack Obama finally bowed to pressure from immigration rights activists and signaled on Thursday that he may change his deportation policy. The president changed course after months of claiming there was nothing his White House could do to stem the flow of deportations of undocumented immigrants. Obama announced in a meeting readout that he has requested a review of his administration’s enforcement policies for immigration laws to see if that enforcement can be done ‘more humanely within the confines of the law,’ the White House said Thursday. To immigrant rights activists, however, that is something of a victory. It means Obama is taking steps toward changing the administration’s deportation policies — though the groups won’t be satisfied until the policies are in force.” http://politi.co/1cXSgsl


‘OPEN MIKE’ LAUNCHES WITH MACON PHILLIPS – Check out the debut video of POLITICO’s new weekly series, “Open Mike,” featuring a conversation between Mike Allen and the digital diplomacy lead at the State Department, Macon Phillips. Watch Phillips’ take on how social media and digital strategies are helping shape diplomacy in Ukraine, and hear his thoughts on the popular Deathstar petition: www.politico.com/open-mike/


WHO WANTS PI? – The only two physicists in Congress, Reps. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) and Rush Holt (D-N.J.) will be celebrating Pi Day today with … pie. “On 3.14, take a break from the irrational Congress and celebrate an irrational number with the only two physicists in Congress,” Foster’s office said in an email. There will be a variety of pies and the event, at noon in Foster’s office in Longworth 1224, is open to the public.


COLIN POWELL’S #tbt pic was pretty sweet. But here’s Rep. Nita Lowey and her husband on their wedding day more than 50 years ago: pic.twitter.com/B4v9chykmK


FLORIDA REPUBLICAN DAVID JOLLY was sworn in Thursday as the newest member of the House. He won a special election Tuesday and fills the vacancy left by the death of Rep. Bill Young.


BOEHNER, PELOSI INVITE POPE TO ADDRESS CONGRESS – Our own Jake Sherman writes: “Speaker John Boehner has invited Pope Francis to address a joint session of Congress. It is an open invitation, the speaker’s office said, and it’s not yet clear when he’ll give the speech on Capitol Hill. … ‘His address as a visiting head of state before a joint meeting of the House and Senate would honor our nation in keeping with the best traditions of our democratic institutions’ [Boehner said in a statement]. ‘It would also offer an excellent opportunity for the American people as well as the nations of the world to hear his message in full.’ Boehner and the previous speaker, Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, are Catholics.” http://politi.co/1gwfMYy


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 14, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @BenSchorr and @KatiepLong.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is out today. The House is in at 9 a.m. with first and last votes expected between 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. on the SGR Repeal and Medicare Provider Payment Modernization Act. Both chambers are out on recess all of next week.


AROUND THE HILL – Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra and Reps. Lucille Roybal-Allard and Michelle Lujan Grisham speak on the ACA and Latino Americans, at 9 a.m. in HVC 215. Speaker John Boehner hosts President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) Enda Kenny at the annual St. Patrick’s Day luncheon at 11:30 in Statuary Hall. A departure ceremony takes place at 1:25 p.m. on the East House Steps.


SCOTT BROWN BEGINS SEEKING STAFF FOR SENATE RUN – Steve Peoples writes for the AP: “Former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown has begun seeking campaign staff while aggressively courting New Hampshire’s political elite, marking what local Republicans consider serious steps toward launching a Senate campaign against Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen. The stakes are high for the GOP’s national push for the Senate majority this fall as well as for Brown’s own political ambitions. The longtime Massachusetts resident, having recently relocated to his seacoast New Hampshire vacation home, is expected to launch an exploratory committee to enter the race as soon as Friday, according to several New Hampshire Republican officials who spoke directly to Brown about his plans. The move officially allows him to begin raising money and hiring staff. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly disclose his plans before an official announcement.” http://huff.to/1gnHsme


THE ANTI- HARRY REID – “Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval is nearly impossible not to like,” Jon Ralston writes in POLITICO Magazine. “He has a sunny disposition and seems ever eager to work with Democrats, who have nary a bad word to say about him. He’s highly popular in Nevada, with approval numbers in the mid-60s, and he stays on message as well as anyone in politics. He is, in a phrase, the anti-Harry Reid. Which is why the prospect of Sandoval facing off against the occasionally dyspeptic, sharply partisan and manifestly unpopular Senate majority leader in the 2016 U.S. Senate race has some Republicans writing Reid’s political eulogy. ‘It would be a wipeout,’ said one Nevada insider. ‘He is 100 percent the perfect candidate against Harry Reid.’


– “Reid knows this, of course. No one plays the political chessboard like the majority leader; following his moves sometimes feels like watching a real life House of Cards, without the murders. He saw the Sandoval threat coming nearly a decade ago. Back then, Reid managed to sideline the up-and-coming Sandoval with a federal judgeship … But … Sandoval left the bench in 2009 and defeated Reid’s son, Rory, in a race for governor. Now it may be Reid the Elder’s turn as Sandoval could defeat two members of the same family for the two highest offices in the state. There’s just one question: Does Sandoval even want to run for the U.S. Senate?” http://politi.co/1npfFqI


A FIGHT OVER ISSA AND IPADS – Matt Fuller, Emma Dumain and Steve Dennis report for Roll Call: “Republicans once again blocked a Democratic resolution demanding a House floor apology from Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa for silencing Rep. Elijah E. Cummings last week during an IRS hearing. The nearly party line vote to table the privileged resolution came after a theatrical display of protest on the floor, with Democrats refusing to give up on the issue. As [Rep. Dan] Kildee and his Democratic colleagues offered the resolution, they defiantly held pictures of Issa making the throat-cutting motion, displaying the image on iPads, iPhones and paper. A floor procedure kerfuffle, in which a new House precedent may have been established, ensued.


– “Presiding officer Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, insisted that that ‘House will not proceed’ as long as Democrats continued to hold up their iPads displaying the image. ‘Regular order would be putting the iPads down,’ Simpson said.” http://bit.ly/1kQIfiS


POT LOBBY’S PITCH: IT’S GOOD BUSINESSES – Holly Yeager reports for the Washington Post: “The delegation from the National Cannabis Industry Association made a point of dressing well for its day on Capitol Hill, sporting mostly dark suits, lots of ties and plenty of the group’s signature lapel pins, which feature a sun rising over vibrant fields of marijuana. Marijuana advocates have come to lobby Washington before, often to argue for more lenient treatment under federal law. But on Thursday, buoyed by a flurry of state decisions that have expanded the legal use of marijuana, the cannabis crowd came less as social activists than as entrepreneurs, asking Congress to remove some of the obstacles that stand in the way of their fledgling businesses.” http://wapo.st/1iHCv6x


– How many members of Congress use pot? Jared Polis has a guess. Elahe Izadi in National Journal: http://bit.ly/1dWhFAC


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Paul Hays was first to correctly answer that Wilmer “Vinegar Bend” Mizell, a former North Carolina congressman, was raised in Mississippi but nicknamed after a town in Alabama where he was born.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Brad Grantz has today’s question: This former Pennsylvania Democratic congressman had a grandson who went onto fame as a baseball announcer for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Name the congressman and his grandson. The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** Presented by RepealSGR.org: Bipartisan/bicameral legislation to repeal the failed Medicare cost control formula called the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR), and reform the Medicare physician payment system, has been introduced. The bill would create a system that is sustainable, fair and efficient, secure patient access and encourage quality, affordable care. SGR threatens patient access with drastic Medicare provider cuts. Physicians face constant instability, demonstrated by the 23.7 percent cut to physician payments scheduled for April 1. Congress has spent over $ 154 billion – more than the cost of the legislation – on 16 short term patches in the last decade. These patches are the equivalent of paying the minimum on a credit card – it delays the inevitable, increases the total bill and is bad for the budget. Republican and Democratic Leadership need to continue working together to develop bipartisan pay-fors so the House and Senate can pass S.2000/H.R. 4015, by March 31. www.repealsgr.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA – McCain to GOP: Don’t call yourselves ‘Reagan Republicans’ – ST. PADDY’S DAY LUNCH -- Senate strikes deal on jobless aid – HOUSE FIGHTS OVER ISSA AND iPADS

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Toronto doctor smacks down U.S. Senate question on Canadian waitlist deaths

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Toronto doctor smacks down U.S. Senate question on Canadian waitlist deaths

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Senate committee takes up Ukrainian aid; McCain to travel there

John McCain in Iraq, 2007.
The man likes his trips.


A few details of the Senate’s Ukrainian aid bill are coming to light, via Foreign Relations chairman Bob Menendez.

The bill mirrors one passed in the House last week by providing $ 1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees to Ukraine but goes further by containing language allowing a 2010 restructuring of the IMF to go forward.

It also directs the administration to help Ukraine in recovering assets linked to corrupt activities by former President Viktor Yanukovych, provides $ 50 million in direct aid for “democracy, governance and civil society assistance” and $ 100 million for military aide.



The committee will do a mark-up of the bill this afternoon; IMF reforms may be the main sticking point for conservatives, since those reforms may weaken United States’ influence over the organization.

Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain is helping the way he generally helps out during a crisis: by arranging photo-ops.


Seven senators plan to visit Ukraine this weekend to meet with the country’s political leaders and show support for the country’s ongoing standoff with Russia. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who is leading the delegation, confirmed to reporters that he and “a large number” of senators of both parties would be making the trip.


Never really been a fan of senators of either party drifting off to make foreign policy statements in crisis zones, that generally being not their job, but I realize I’m probably in a tiny minority on that one. And McCain, who have we mentioned lately really wanted to be president so he could be in charge of these things, probably gets a warmer reception in Ukraine than he does in his home state.



Daily Kos



Senate committee takes up Ukrainian aid; McCain to travel there

Sunday, March 9, 2014

ISSA TO CUMMINGS: I"M SORRY – Gillibrand"s military sex assault bill defeated – DOJ INVOLVED IN CIA, SENATE FLAP -- Rubio"s 2nd act – Increase the size of the House?


By Scott Wong (swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


ISSA’S MEA CULPA – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan reports on the words you don’t hear from Darrell Issa every day: I’m sorry: “Controversial GOP Rep. Darrell Issa has apologized to the top Democrat on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee following an ugly incident during a Wednesday hearing on alleged IRS abuses. Issa, a California Republican and chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, had the microphone for Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings cut off during the middle of a statement by the Maryland lawmaker. The move infuriated Cummings and other Democrats, who went to the House floor on Thursday with a motion condemning Issa’s actions.


– “While Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and other Republicans backed him and easily defeated the Democratic motion, the partisan controversy threatened to derail Issa’s investigation into whether the IRS improperly targeted conservative nonprofit groups. Issa called Cummings on Thursday evening to offer his apologies, Cummings said in a statement released by his office. … For his part, Issa admitted that he should have been ‘more sensitive’ to Cummings’s request to offer a statement during an appearance by Lois Lerner, an IRS official at the center of the scandal. … But Issa and Cummings are likely to return to their partisan battling next week, when Issa is expected to move forward with a contempt resolution against Lois Lerner, a former IRS official at the center of the controversy.” http://politi.co/P7xDPI


MILITARY SEXUAL ASSAULT: FROM SCANDAL TO CAUSE – Anna Palmer, Juana Summers and Darren Samuelsohn write for the hometown paper: “Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and supporters of her crusade to take military sexual assault cases out of the chain of command lost a major battle Thursday when the proposal was defeated in a procedural vote. But the war is not over. The yearlong campaign transformed the evolution of military sexual assault from episodic scandals to a full-blown mega-cause with staying power — complete with appearances in popular culture and powerful champions who’ve learned the issue can be politically potent. …


– “Supporters of reform promise the military is going to face ongoing pressure on the powerful political issue. And they’ll have another chance later this year when Congress sets to work writing the next defense authorization bill. ‘I think this entire legislative battle has elevated the stakes and the merits of this issue,’ said Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), a 2016 presidential aspirant, who supported Gillibrand. … Cruz pointed out, the concept behind Gillibrand’s proposal served as an important story line in the second season of the popular Netflix show ‘House of Cards.’ ‘I’ve watched the entire second season,’ Cruz said. ‘I was encouraged to see that the signature issue was this issue.’” http://politi.co/1f5dwLC


– The Gillibrand bill came up five votes short of the 60 needed to break a filibuster, with 10 Republicans backing the measure and 10 Democrats opposing it. Passage of Sen. Claire McCaskill’s alternative “was never in question. Gillibrand even came out in support of it when it was first introduced. And sure enough, the procedural vote to advance McCaskill’s bill Thursday was 100-0, though a vote on final passage was delayed until Monday,” Samuelsohn, Summers and Palmer write. http://politi.co/MTcdDU


– SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) never was going to endorse Rand Paul or Ted Cruz for president, but he took aim at the senators for backing the Gillibrand bill without mentioning them by name: “You want to be commander in chief? You told me a lot today about who you are as a commander in chief candidate,” Graham said at a press conference after the vote. “You were willing to fire every commander in the military for reasons I don’t quite understand,” he said. “We’ll have a good discussion as to whether or not you understand how the military actually works.” The Hill’s Jeremy Herb: http://bit.ly/1jYFskV


** REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS FINALLY AGREE! *But not if Congress gives up before the March 31 deadline. Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula.  SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. FixMedicareNow.org 


UKRAINE WILL VOTE TO SECEDE, JOIN RUSSIA – The Wall Street Journal’s Lukas I. Alpert in Moscow and Margaret Coker in Simferopol, Ukraine: “Crimea’s Moscow-backed government voted to secede from Ukraine and join Russia and accelerated a snap referendum to ratify the move, a dramatic escalation of tension that pushed the West closer to imposing sanctions if Russian troops don’t withdraw. The scheduling of the vote for March 16 means that Crimea could be absorbed into Russia in a matter of weeks. It also means the referendum could be held while the region is under de facto Russian occupation—with no opportunity for a free and fair campaign. A Russian move to absorb Crimea against the will of Ukraine’s national government would mark the first time since World War II that such a maneuver had been attempted in Europe.


– “U.S. and European leaders said Thursday that such a referendum would violate the Ukrainian constitution and international law. President Barack Obama spoke for an hour Thursday afternoon with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the White House said, stressing Russian violations of Ukrainian sovereignty and urging Moscow to talk to the new government in Kiev. He also urged Mr. Putin to ensure all Russian forces return to their bases and to support new elections in May. Any discussion about the future of Ukraine must include the legitimate government of Ukraine,’ Mr. Obama said at the White House. ‘In 2014, we are well beyond the days when borders can be redrawn over the heads of democratic leaders.’” http://on.wsj.com/1gctm3e


– THE HOUSE, on a lopsided 385-23 vote, passed legislation providing loan guarantees to the new Ukrainian government, but senators are hoping to move on their own, more comprehensive bill. POLITICO’s Seung Min Kim: http://politi.co/1g4WZak


– SPEAKER JOHN BOEHNER, writing in a WSJ op-ed, calls on Obama to export U.S. natural gas to Europe to disrupt Putin’s energy influence there: “In response to Mr. Putin’s aggression in Ukraine, President Obama should announce a series of steps that will dramatically expand production of American-made energy, beginning with lifting this de facto ban on exports of U.S.-produced liquefied natural gas. Taking this step would also create American jobs and lower prices for our consumers and small businesses when coupled with other moves that would bolster energy production in North America. These include construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline, ending the Obama administration’s embargo on our supplies of oil and gas from federal lands and waters, and halting the effort to take coal out of America’s electricity generation mix.


– “The president doesn’t need legislation from Congress to make these changes. This is something the commander in chief can do right now in the face of Mr. Putin’s aggression. It would also provide much-needed evidence that the president’s State of the Union commitment to an ‘all of the above’ energy strategy is real, and not just poll-driven rhetoric. America not only has a right to develop and market its natural resources. In the face of rising danger, it has an obligation to do so.” http://on.wsj.com/1iio3pX


SENATE GOP LEADER MITCH McCONNELL writes in a USA Today op-ed: “With this latest [Obamacare] delay], the president is basically now telling Americans: If you like your plan, some of you can keep it — but only until the next election.” http://usat.ly/1f4gwaY


HARRY REID says his wife, Landra, came up with his “addicted to Koch” line. BuzzFeed’s Kate Nocera: http://bzfd.it/1jYArsr


REP. FREDERICA WILSON (D-FLA.) will accompany President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama on Air Force One and Marine One today as they fly to Miami’s Coral Reef Senior High School to speak about education. Wilson is a frequent flier on Air Force One: Her Cannon Building office is adorned with photos of various trips she’s taken with the president. 


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 7, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @HannahSalem and @beckybowers.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – Both the House and Senate are out today, and no press events are scheduled on the Hill. But CPAC continues at National Harbor, including speeches from Sen. John Cornyn of Texas at 9:16 a.m., former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum at 2:26 p.m. and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul at 2:51 p.m.


HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA, opened the Senate in prayer yesterday: “With our thoughts, we make our world. Our mind is central and precedes our deeds. Speak or act with a pure mind, and happiness will follow you like a shadow that never leaves.”


DOJ NOW INVOLVED IN CIA, SENATE FLAP – Mark Hosenball reports for Reuters: “The Justice Department and FBI are looking into a dispute over Senate investigators’ access to what the Central Intelligence Agency regarded as highly privileged and sensitive documents about its use of “enhanced” interrogation techniques, sources familiar with the inquiry said on Thursday. The CIA’s inspector general asked the Justice Department to become involved after the agency and members of the Senate Intelligence Committee got into a dispute over whether Senate investigators looked at documents they were not supposed to see, and whether agency operatives inappropriately monitored Senate investigators.” http://yhoo.it/1hSwZiY


IN SECOND ACT, RUBIO PUSHES STRENGTH ABROAD – Jonathan Martin writes for the New York Times: “The road to presidential success in Iowa and New Hampshire may not run through the Crimean Peninsula or the streets of Caracas, but in recent weeks [Sen. Marco] Rubio has used Russia’s incursion into Ukraine and the violent clashes in Venezuela to remind Republicans of their orthodoxy — projecting strength abroad — and of why he was such a favorite in the party before seeing his popularity slip over his backing of an immigration overhaul. … Addressing a gathering of conservatives here on Thursday, Mr. Rubio, a potential 2016 presidential candidate, sought to link the right’s resolute belief in American exceptionalism with a call for the United States to play a more robust role in confronting bad actors on the world stage.


– “That posture stands in contrast with other members of his party, notably Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, who argues that the United States should be wary of foreign intervention and retreat from the policies of the George W. Bush era. The divergent national security views of the two ambitious, first-term senators offer an early preview of a debate sure to play out in the Republican presidential primary in 2016. ‘There is only one nation on earth capable of rallying and bringing together the free people on this planet to stand up to the spread of totalitarianism,’ Mr. Rubio told attendees of the Conservative Political Action Conference, offering a tour d’horizon of affairs in China, North Korea, Iran, Venezuela and Russia.” http://nyti.ms/1cH9Afh


JARRETT COMPLAINS ABOUT MURGUÍA’S ‘DEPORTER-IN-CHIEF’ QUIP – Reid Epstein and Seung Min Kim report for POLITICO: “The White House is finding itself increasingly on defense over deportations of undocumented immigrants, as key Democrats and a top immigration reform group have gone public this week with their desire for President Barack Obama to act. National Council of La Raza President Janet Murguía called Obama the “deporter-in-chief” in a major speech Tuesday, leading to angry phone calls from senior White House officials — including adviser Valerie Jarrett — according to three people familiar with the calls. Jarrett told Murguía that Obama was ‘very disappointed’ with the statement, the sources said. … ‘It’s fair to say I heard from the White House and they were disappointed,’ Murguía said in an interview Thursday. The White House declined to comment on the calls.” http://politi.co/1fO4jm9


SINEMA WON’T SWITCH DISTRICTS – Rebekah Sanders reports for The Arizona Republic: “U.S. Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., said Thursday that she will remain in her competitive re-election race instead of running for the solidly Democratic Phoenix seat held by retiring Rep. Ed Pastor. Sinema’s decision will likely be a relief for many Democrats, who feared her departure from the toss-up District 9 would hurt the party’s chances of keeping the seat. Sinema confirmed her decision in a phone interview from Washington, D.C., with The Arizona Republic, ending days of speculation as she huddled with top advisers about her options.  … Most analysts consider her to be in a strong position for re-election in the Tempe-based seat, though she is likely to face a GOP challenge every two years.” http://bit.ly/1hSiDyD


BIG MONEY IN RACE TO SUCCEED BILL YOUNG – The Washington Post’s Paul Kane reports from Clearwater, Fla.: “The race to succeed the late C.W. Bill Young has stunned voters here accustomed to sleepy campaigns over the genteel and popular congressman’s four-decade tenure. Almost twice as much money has been spent in the general election — at least $ 8.3 million by the nominees to fill Young’s seat, the party campaign committees and outside activist groups — than Young, a Republican, spent combined in his successful runs in the previous six races in this century.


– “Perhaps most surprising in the neck-and-neck race between Democrat Alex Sink and Republican David Jolly is that Sink and her allies have a decided financial edge, blanketing the airwaves with more ads than her opponent ahead of Tuesday’s vote. This money has given her the chance to win despite lingering Democratic doubts that the party’s voters will show up in a low-turnout special election. While Jolly fought a tough primary, draining his resources for the general election, Sink hoarded her cash for an eight-week sprint to the finish. Her campaign has spent $ 2 million on television advertising in the general election campaign, compared with just $ 542,000 for Jolly, according to a tally sheet from a conservative group monitoring the spending.” http://wapo.st/1ighP5s


IT’S TIME TO INCREASE THE SIZE OF THE HOUSE, argues Sean Trend, a senior columnist for Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball: “First, a bigger House would diminish the impact of malapportionment that comes with single-member states. … Second, increasing the size of the House could diminish the impact of gerrymandering. … Third, increasing the size of the House would make majority-minority districts easier to maintain. … Fourth, increasing the size of the House would improve rural representation. … Fifth, though this is difficult to measure and hence more speculative, increasing the size of the House could help mend some of the detachment that is felt between Washington and the states.” http://bit.ly/1cfDFI4


– NOT SO FAST, says Bloomberg View’s Jonathan Bernstein: “Trende’s case for a modestly bigger chamber, perhaps from 435 seats to some number between 550 or 650, is well-argued. He’s right that there is a problem of malapportionment with single-representative states. He’s also right that demographic descriptive representation, or creating a House that ‘looks like’ America, would be more manageable if there were more, smaller, districts. Nevertheless, I think the Big House is a bad idea, both on electoral and governing grounds. For elections, it would probably mean fewer voters in competitive districts, and less media attention to each individual election. … What about inside Congress? A Big House means more influence for the leadership, and less for each member. That’s exactly the opposite of what the House needs.” http://bit.ly/1cfDFI4


TODAY’S TRIVIA – No one correctly answered yesterday’s question, so we’ll ask it again today: John Boehner is the only former chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee to become speaker. What former member of the House who served as speaker later became chairman of the Education committee? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for. But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




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ISSA TO CUMMINGS: I"M SORRY – Gillibrand"s military sex assault bill defeated – DOJ INVOLVED IN CIA, SENATE FLAP -- Rubio"s 2nd act – Increase the size of the House?