Showing posts with label budget. Show all posts
Showing posts with label budget. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Weekly Address: The President’s Budget Ensures Opportunity for All Hardworking Americans


In this week’s address, the President highlighted the important differences between the budget he’s put forward — built on opportunity for all — and the budget House Republicans are advocating for, which stacks the deck against the middle class.


While the President is focused on building lasting economic security and ensuring that hardworking Americans have the opportunity to get ahead, Republicans are advancing the same old top-down approach of cutting taxes for the wealthiest Americans and slashing important investments in education, infrastructure, and research and development.


Transcript | mp4 | mp3





White House.gov Blog Feed



Weekly Address: The President’s Budget Ensures Opportunity for All Hardworking Americans

Saturday, March 29, 2014

N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote



Sat Mar 29, 2014 4:44pm EDT



New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Mike Segar

New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo.


Credit: Reuters/Mike Segar




(Reuters) – Before a planned vote on Monday, New York legislators and Governor Andrew Cuomo reached a deal on the state’s 2014-2015 budget after several weeks of negotiating behind closed doors, according to state officials on Saturday.


The budget keeps growth in all funds spending below 2 percent at $ 137.9 billion and provides funding for statewide pre-kindergarten programs. It also cuts business taxes and introduces property tax relief for homeowners, Governor Cuomo said on Saturday.


The agreement comes after budget bills were printed late on Friday night, allowing lawmakers to vote on the plan on Monday, the last day of the state’s financial year. If passed, the budget would be Cuomo’s fourth on-time budget in a row.


“It has to be passed, and we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but it was a good piece of work,” Cuomo told reporters on a conference call.


The new budget earmarks $ 1.5 billion in property tax relief for homeowners. It also includes an increase of more than 5 percent in school aid, $ 300 million of which will go to pre-kindergarten in New York City and provides new protections for charter schools.


Lawmakers rejected New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s request for a tax hike on the city’s wealthy to help fund classes for preschoolers and pay for after-school programs.


The budget looks to cut taxes and create jobs by establishing a 20 percent real estate property tax credit for manufacturers who own or lease property. And, beginning in 2014, it will slash the tax rate on income for all manufacturers from the current 5.9 percent to zero.


Through budget initiatives, tougher bribery and anti-corruption laws will be implemented, and about $ 162 million will go to New York’s Environmental Protection Fund, an increase of $ 9 million over the previous budget.


Also, young people and new drivers will face stricter laws governing texting while driving. Licenses will be suspended for 120 days for first-time offenders, and a year’s suspension will be imposed for those convicted twice.


At the same time, New York State’s budget will fund a Commission on Youth, Public Safety and Justice. The commission will be entrusted to develop recommendations on ways to help raise the age at which juveniles are tried.


New York is one of only two states that prosecute 16- and 17-year olds through the adult criminal justice system.


(Reporting By Theopolis Waters in Chicago and Edward Krudy in New York; editing by Gunna Dickson)






Reuters: Politics



N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote

Friday, March 21, 2014

Exclusive: Boeing U.S. tanker program seen $1 billion over budget



WASHINGTON Fri Mar 21, 2014 3:42pm EDT



Saturday, March 8, 2014

Congressional Budget Office blows it — again

Its recent minimum wage report is terribly misleading. The time has come to change the CBO’s mandate fundamentally




    








Salon.com



Congressional Budget Office blows it — again

China Expands Defense Budget Over 12% To $132 Billion

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China Expands Defense Budget Over 12% To $132 Billion

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Interest Payments on Debt to Exceed Defense Budget in 5 Years


New analysis by the Senate Budget Committee Republican staff finds that, under President Obama’s proposed budget, interest payments on debt will exceed the defense budget in just 5 years.


Here’s a chart put together by the Republicans, who are led by Ranking Member Jeff Sessions, on the Senate Budget Committee:



“Interest costs to finance national debt exceed defense spending by FY 2020,” the chart reads.



The Weekly Standard



Interest Payments on Debt to Exceed Defense Budget in 5 Years

5 takeaways from President Obama"s budget



President Barack Obama’s budget isn’t going anywhere on Capitol Hill.


Then again, it’s not really meant to.



The White House document — price tagged at $ 3.091 trillion — serves a different purpose. It’s packed with political messaging and some of the leading arguments from the Democratic playbook headed into the midterms.


Here are POLITICO’s top five budget takeaways:


1. A middle-class message


Obama’s budget represents a unifying document for Democratic priorities, full of issues that appeal to the middle class and reminders that the economy has turned a corner since the Great Recession.


(PHOTOS: What’s in Obama’s 2015 budget?)


Featured prominently near the beginning of the budget is a letter from Obama highlighting how his administration has presided over a solid number of new housing starts, rosy unemployment rates and a shrinking deficit.


“It’s a road map for creating jobs with good wages and expanding opportunity for all Americans,” Obama said in introducing the budget at a Washington elementary school.


It’s also full of red meat for Obama’s Democratic base.


Minimum wage increase to $ 10.10? Check. Big boosts to education funding? Check. Obamacare money? Check.


The proposal to expand the Earned Income Tax Credit is also squarely aimed at the middle class — “Right now, it helps about half of all parents in America at some point in their lives,” Obama said. And to pay for it? “Closing loopholes like the ones that let wealthy individuals classify themselves as a small business to avoid paying their fair share of taxes.”


His budget is also another chance to highlight the end of the war in Afghanistan at the beginning of 2015 by pointing to the potential cost savings. No matter that the Pentagon doesn’t yet have all the answers on the long-term costs as the U.S. keeps a contingent of troops in Afghanistan.


2. Glass is half-full


Obama’s budget is also an invitation for fact checkers — especially his letter to lawmakers at the start of the document celebrating just how great the country is doing after almost six years in office.


(WATCH: Obama’s full 2015 budget remarks)


More than 8 million new jobs created in the last four years: That’s correct, except he’s counting from the low point in his presidency and leaves out how there are still 1.2 million fewer jobs than when the recession started in December 2007.


The housing market is rebounding: Sure, the trends have been good for many parts of the country, but market experts are also quick to note that the industry is really just getting back to where it was before the 1999 start of the up-and-down cycle. Some alarming signs are appearing, too, from rising interest rates to tightened inventory and new concerns about affordability.


The U.S. is a net exporter of oil thanks to a major spike in domestic production, for the first time since 1995: It is indeed a good time to be in the fossil fuel business, but that’s thanks almost entirely to private industry development and much less because of Obama’s policies.


3. Goodbye, crisis government


The budget is like a greatest-hits album of talking points about the damage that’s been done from Washington’s repeated descents into dysfunction.


It cites a Congressional Budget Office report showing that sequestration cost the country 750,000 jobs and the Office of Management and Budget’s finding that October’s partial government shutdown led to billions of dollars in lost productivity.


“These self-inflicted economic wounds must stop,” Obama’s budget says, with a reminder of the hit from sequester and the shutdown on troops, women, seniors and the poor.


Thanks to election year realities, Obama’s plea for some normalcy appears likely to happen. Republicans took a hit from the shutdown and have helped lock in overall spending caps for 2014 and 2015. Sequestration isn’t scheduled to return until 2016. And the debt limit is on a glide path through early next year.


Obama’s budget does also note that crisis government wasn’t all bad. After all, it did help shrink the deficit — it’s fallen by half as a share of gross domestic product — thanks in large part to … sequestration.


4. Zombie policies


Some Obama proposals just don’t know when to call it a day — no matter how many times lawmakers say no.


Back for a repeat performance in Tuesday’s budget: Calls to eliminate $ 4 billion a year in tax breaks for oil, gas and other fuel producers. The idea never got traction before, and it’s even more DOA now that Louisiana Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu — in a tough reelection race this November — has risen to chair the Energy and Natural Resources Committee.


Obama is trying again for a major federal investment aimed at expanding high-quality preschool. But the pay-for — a doubling of the tobacco tax — remains a nonstarter.


Fears of expanding government don’t seem to stop the president from pitching a new infrastructure bank, which would leverage public- and private-sector funds to help seed large projects. There have been bipartisan bills introduced on this issue in the Senate. But that’s never been enough to address complaints that it should be Congress dishing out the dough.


5. Mom and apple pie


Lawmakers won’t immediately reject everything in Obama’s budget.


After all, Senate Democrats will have a big say later this year when it comes to crafting the details of appropriations bills. And some of the president’s ideas hit on issues that nearly everyone agrees on.


Just take a look at several of the domestic items packaged in the president’s call for $ 56 billion in new spending.


Obama wants to spend $ 6 billion over four years to help community colleges and other job-training institutions launch new programs and apprenticeships.


And he’s calling for a Works Progress Administration-like attempt to spiff up the national parks ahead of the agency’s centennial in 2016. That should resonate with lawmakers following the shutdown, which the Associated Press reported Tuesday had meant 8 million fewer visitors and $ 144 million in lost spending at the parks and surrounding communities.


Former House Appropriations Committee GOP staff director Jim Dyer called the parks pitch a “shrewd” move by OMB that would likely find a way into this year’s spending bill. “The Park Service still enjoys a broad constituency on the Hill, and, despite a scarcity of resources, there will be interest in recognizing their anniversary,” he said.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



5 takeaways from President Obama"s budget

Obama 2015 budget focuses on boosting economy








President Barack Obama sits with Emily Hare as she completes her spelling lessons during his visit to a preschool classroom at Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Obama visited the school to talk about his 2015 budget proposal, which was released today. Powell elementary has seen rapid growth in recent years and serves a predominantly Hispanic student body. Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray, who greeted Obama at the school, recently directed $ 20 million to Powell for a planned modernization and addition. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





President Barack Obama sits with Emily Hare as she completes her spelling lessons during his visit to a preschool classroom at Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Obama visited the school to talk about his 2015 budget proposal, which was released today. Powell elementary has seen rapid growth in recent years and serves a predominantly Hispanic student body. Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray, who greeted Obama at the school, recently directed $ 20 million to Powell for a planned modernization and addition. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





President Barack Obama answers a question regarding the ongoing situation in the Ukraine during his visit to Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014, where he went to discuss his fiscal 2015 federal budget proposels. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





Copies of President Barack Obama’s proposed fiscal 2015 budget are set out for distribution by Senate Budget Committee Clerk Adam Kamp, center, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. President Barack Obama is unwrapping a nearly $ 4 trillion budget that gives Democrats an election-year playbook for fortifying the economy and bolstering Americans’ incomes. It also underscores how pressure has faded to launch bold, new attacks on federal deficits. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





FILE – In this Feb. 28, 2014 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. Striving for unity among Democrats rather than compromise with Republicans, President Barack Obama unveils an election-year budget on Tuesday that drops cuts to Social Security and seeks new money for infrastructure, education and job training. Congress will likely approve a smaller amount based on last year’s budget deal. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)





FILE – In this Feb. 5, 2014 file photo, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. listens on Capitol Hill in Washington. Striving for unity among Democrats rather than compromise with Republicans, President Barack Obama unveils an election-year budget on Tuesday that drops cuts to Social Security and seeks new money for infrastructure, education and job training. Congress will likely approve a smaller amount based on last year’s budget deal. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama sent Congress a $ 3.9 trillion budget Tuesday that would funnel money into road building, education and other economy-bolstering programs, handing Democrats a playbook for their election-year themes of creating jobs and narrowing the income gap between rich and poor.


The blueprint for fiscal 2015, which begins Oct. 1, is laden with populist proposals designed to fortify those goals. It includes new spending for pre-school education and job training, expanded tax credits for 13.5 million low-income workers without children and more than $ 1 trillion in higher taxes over the next decade, mostly for the wealthiest Americans and corporations.


“As a country, we’ve got to make a decision if we’re going to protect tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans or if we’re going to make smart investments necessary to create jobs and grow our economy and expand opportunity for every American,” Obama told students at an elementary school in the nation’s capital.


With an eye in part on job creation, $ 302 billion would be spent to upgrade roads, railroads and mass transit, with more money aimed at improvements at Veterans Affairs hospitals and national parks. Additional funds would be aimed at clean energy research, creating 45 public-private manufacturing institutes for spurring innovation and training workers whose companies have closed or moved.


To help pay for those initiatives and others and trim federal deficits as well, Obama relies in part on higher revenue.


He would raise $ 651 billion by limiting tax deductions for the nation’s highest earners and with a “Buffett tax” — named for billionaire Warren Buffett — slapping minimum levies on the highest-earning people. Taxes would also be raised on large estates, financial institutions, tobacco products, airline passengers and managers of private investment funds.


Congress has ignored those revenue proposals and many of Obama’s spending ideas before. With the entire House and one-third of the Senate facing re-election in November, campaign-year pressures and gridlock between the Democratic-led Senate and Republican dominated House all but ensure that few of the president’s initiatives will go far.


“The president has offered perhaps his most irresponsible budget yet,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who has participated in two failed rounds of deficit-reduction talks with Obama since 2011. “American families looking for jobs and opportunity will find only more government in this plan.”


“It’s disappointing that the president produced a campaign document instead of putting forth a serious budget blueprint that makes the tough choices necessary to get our fiscal house in order,” said Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee.


Obama’s budget claims to obey overall agency spending limits that were enacted in December after a bipartisan compromise was reached between Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the heads of the House and Senate budget committees.


Yet Obama was proposing an additional package of $ 55 billion in spending priorities, half for defense and half for domestic programs.


Without that extra money, Pentagon spending be $ 496 billion, the same as this year. The Pentagon plans to shrink the Army from 490,000 active-duty soldiers to as few as 440,000 over the coming five years — the smallest since just before World War II.


The extra funds would allow steps like buying additional aircraft and enhancing training.


Budget cutters have had the upper hand over defense hawks in recent years. But this year’s debate over military spending will have an added element as Obama encounters Republican demands for a tough U.S. stance following Russia’s intervention in Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula.


On the domestic side, Obama would use the additional money for grants to states for preschools, new research financed by the National Institutes of Health and modernization of aviation safety systems.


That extra spending would be paid for by cutting federal crop insurance, raising airline passenger fees and capping retirement account tax benefits for wealthy savers — all of which would face an uphill climb in Congress.


The White House released fewer budget documents than normal on Tuesday, making it hard to determine exact costs and details of some of those additional spending proposals and others, such as the 2015 price tag for Obama’s health care overhaul.


However, Obama’s plan to expand the earned income tax credit to childless, low-income workers would cost $ 116 billion over 10 years. It would increase the current $ 500 maximum those recipients can receive to $ 1,000.


The budget projects a 2015 deficit of $ 564 billion and a shortfall this year of $ 649 billion. If those come true, it would mark three straight years of annual red ink under $ 1 trillion, following four previous years when deficits exceeded that mark every time.


The president’s spending plan also takes credit for reducing potential accumulated deficits over coming decade by $ 2.2 trillion, though the red ink would grow by $ 4.9 trillion over that period. The nation still faces long-term deficit problems as baby boomers retire and government health care costs continue to grow.


Nearly one-third of Obama’s savings come from claimed savings from the end of the U.S. war in Iraq and the gradual withdrawal of forces from Afghanistan. Critics argue that those savings are fictional because with the ending of U.S. involvement in those conflicts, no one had been expecting that money to be spent on combat.


Other savings the president claims include $ 158 billion from his proposal to revamp immigration laws, which has stalled in Congress. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has made a similar estimate, with federal revenue accruing as more immigrants work and pay taxes.


The budget also retains Obama’s 2012 proposal to reshape corporate income taxes, including lowering the top rate from 28 percent to 25 percent. It says the overhaul would raise a one-time $ 150 billion with steps like smaller loopholes for U.S. companies doing business overseas — about half of which Obama would use to finance transportation improvements.


That resembles a proposal by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., in a rare instance of overlap on revenues by the two parties. But prospects for a tax overhaul remain dim in an election year.


Much of the rest of Obama’s deficit reduction would come from other proposals with little chance of surviving in Congress, including higher taxes and Medicare costs for the rich and cuts in government payments to pharmaceutical companies and other Medicare providers. With declining budget deficits, it has become easier for lawmakers to avoid seriously considering the politically painful tax increases and spending cuts needed to significantly reduce the shortfalls.


Thus, the president’s budget does not renew last year’s offer — hated by many fellow Democrats — to save money by slowing increases of Social Security benefits. The White House says that plan was advanced only to entice congressional Republicans into deficit-reduction talks and was excluded this year after GOP leaders refused to reciprocate by offering tax increases.


Obama’s budget starts what should be a relatively peaceful year on Washington’s fiscal front lines. That is because land mines embedded in the budgetary landscape have been defused this time around after cliffhanger, partisan showdowns in recent years.


Instead of the annual fight over spending limits — which last year helped produce a 16-day partial government shutdown — Murray and Ryan’s bipartisan compromise set an overall agency spending cap for the next two years. That has eliminated the need for lawmakers to do anything but provide the details in later spending bills, easing the threat of another federal closure.


Also missing this year is a need to extend the government’s debt limit, which in the past has sparked battles that threatened economy-jarring federal defaults. Congress has given the Treasury Department authority to borrow money into next March, eliminating a must-pass legislative vehicle that either side might use to make demands.


___


Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Nedra Pickler and Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Obama 2015 budget focuses on boosting economy

BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT –SCREEN MOMENT – U.S. Threatens sanctions against Russia, Hill preps Ukraine aid package – Potential Sinema rival: Don"t switch districts


BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT-SCREEN MOMENT – Our own Darren Samuelsohn explains: “President Barack Obama is facing a major foreign policy test — but on Tuesday he’ll have to pause for the ritualistic domestic politics of the budget. Unlike Vladimir Putin, budget politics are predictable: Obama’s fiscal blueprint isn’t going anywhere in Congress, and it’s designed primarily as an appeal to his Democratic base in a midterm election year. The president will unveil the $ 3 trillion-plus fiscal plan at 11:30 a.m. at a Washington elementary school, while most of official Washington’s attention is halfway around the world. …


– “The budget will follow on themes from his State of the Union address of economic inequality. It will avoid calling for a big change to entitlements that’s been widely panned by liberals and instead seek to expand a popular tax credit to middle-class workers without children. It also suggests slashing the Pentagon and beefing up spending for early childhood education, highway repairs and combating climate change. Budget politics are often Kabuki theater at their best — this year will be no different. After all, the critical spending caps that will help keep the government open are already in place, and both sides have reasons to avoid tough votes on appropriations bills before November. Yet, as tradition dictates, Washington is sure to proceed with a mad dash to analyze — and pick apart — most of the goodies stuffed into the latest White House budget.” http://politi.co/1dWLr4G


THE DAY AHEAD — 8 a.m.: Copies of the fiscal year 2015 budget will be delivered to Capitol Hill in Dirksen 608 and Cannon 207.


– 11:30 a.m.: President Obama tours a classroom and delivers remarks on his 2015 budget at Powell Elementary School in Washington, D.C.’s Petworth neighborhood.


– 12:45 p.m.: OMB Director Sylvia Matthews Burwell holds a news conference at EEOB about the president’s budget. She’ll be joined by Jason Furman, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Cecilia Muñoz, director of the Domestic Policy Council and Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council.


“Obama budget sets up a debate on poverty,” A1 below the fold, By the Washington Post’s Zachary A. Goldfarb and Robert Costa: “In his latest request to Congress, Obama plans to seek $ 56 billion in fresh spending to expand educational offerings for preschoolers and job training for laid-off workers … Meanwhile, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (Wis.) is at work on a GOP budget plan that aims to overhaul the nation’s welfare system, in part by cutting spending on programs that Ryan argues have locked people into poverty.”


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


U.S. THREATENS SANCTIONS AGAINST RUSSIA – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “The United States prepared Monday to impose sanctions on high-level Russian officials involved in the military occupation of Crimea, as the escalating crisis in Ukraine prompted turmoil in global markets, pounding the Russian ruble and driving up energy prices. The Obama administration suspended military ties to Russia, including exercises, port visits and planning meetings, just a day after calling off trade talks. If Moscow does not reverse course, officials said they would ban visas and freeze assets of select Russian officials in the chain of command as well as target state-run financial institutions. …


– “The besieged Kiev government said Monday that the Russians had deployed 16,000 troops in the region over the past week and had demanded that Ukrainian forces there surrender within hours or face armed assault. While Russia denied it had issued any ultimatums, it was clearly moving to strengthen its control over Crimea, the largely Russian-speaking peninsula in southern Ukraine where Moscow has long maintained a military base.” http://nyti.ms/1dWPK03


HILL PREPS AID PACKAGE FOR UKRAINE – John Bresnahan reports for POLITICO: “House and Senate leaders in both parties are promising quick action on potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. economic aid to Ukraine along with possible sanctions against Russia after its invasion of Crimea. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said he had spoken to House committee chairmen on Monday about assembling a Ukranian aid package, including possible loan guarantees. …


– “House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-Calif.) has already scheduled a hearing on the Ukrainian crisis for Thursday. … Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), however, cautioned that Obama should secure European support for any sanctions against Russia before the United States attempts to impose them.” http://politi.co/1cyPWly


BBC News: “Global markets steady as Ukraine impact fears ease” http://bbc.in/1jO6zyN


BOEHNER: REELECTION AS SPEAKER ‘WON’T EVEN BE CLOSE’ – Sheila McLaughlin and Deirdre Shesgreen report for the Cincinnati Enquirer: “West Chester Republican John Boehner said he is confident he can win a third term as House speaker, despite his rocky three years in the post and his narrow re-election to that leadership slot in 2013. ‘It won’t even be close,’ Boehner said of his re-election as speaker during an hourlong exclusive interview Monday with The Enquirer. ‘I frankly think I’m in better shape with my own caucus than I have been any time in the last three years. … I think they understand me better.’” He also called Putin a “thug.” http://cin.ci/1hCeBL5


POSSIBLE RIVAL TELLS SINEMA: DON’T SWITCH DISTRICTS – Arizona state Rep. Ruben Gallego, in Washington yesterday pitching Phoenix as a host city for the 2016 DNC, made time for a round of interviews about his own congressional run, including with Roll Call’s Anny Livingston: “A Democrat running for the seat of retiring Arizona Rep. Ed Pastor said Sunday he would not drop his bid in deference to freshman Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, a fellow Democrat who may opt to run for the newly opened seat instead of her own. Pastor’s 7th District is solidly Democratic, while any Democrat running for Sinema’s neighboring 9th District could face a tough general election fight every cycle until the next round of redistricting. Because of that, speculation about the possibility that Sinema might move to the open district emerged immediately after Pastor’s Feb. 27 retirement announcement. …


– Gallego said he’ll run no matter what Sinema does. “‘I’m a big supporter of Kyrsten Sinema,’ Gallego said. ‘I got to work for her, work with her. I’ve donated to her campaign the first time around, the second time around, and I hope she stays in District 9 because she is the right moderate, business-oriented voice for that district.’ He added: ‘But, if she decides to move to District 7, we will have a very spirited race and I will run against her.’” http://bit.ly/1kuezYK


– Former White House staffer Ronnie Cho, a Phoenix native, is “seriously considering” running for the Pastor seat, reports the Washington Examiner’s Tim Mak. Cho had a memorable role in an HBO documentary about the Obama campaign. If he wins, he would become the first Korean-American Democrat in Congress. http://washex.am/1lw9U8Q


GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 4, 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 @RepJeffDuncan and @RubenGallego.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is back at 2 p.m. today but both votes and weekly caucus meetings have been postponed until Wednesday due to travel issues related to the snow storm.


The House also meets at 2 p.m. with votes expected about 6:30 p.m. on several bills considered under suspension of the rules: The Home Heating Emergency Assistance Through Transportation (HHEATT) Act, Energy Efficiency Improvement Act, United States-Israel Strategic Partnership Act, a resolution supporting the people of Venezuela as they protest peacefully for democratic change and calling to end the violence, and a homeowners flood insurance bill.


AROUND THE HILL – Copies of the fiscal year 2015 budget will be delivered to Capitol Hill at 8 a.m. in Dirksen 608. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer holds a pen and pad with reporters at 11 a.m. in H-144. Also at 11, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. Rep. Joe Crowley, vice chair of the Democratic Caucus, will deliver remarks at the Aspen Institute’s “Working Towards a Secure Retirement: Strengthening Our Nation’s Savings System” congressional briefing at 1:45 p.m. in Rayburn B-318. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Dave Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


SEN. BOB CORKER (R-TENN.), writing in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, accuses the auto union of trying to muzzle public officials: “Picture an election where an entity is given nearly unfettered access to voters for two years and then is allowed to call for a surprise vote with only a few days’ notice. Then imagine that the entity loses the vote and complains that ‘outside forces’—who happen to be community leaders—should not have been allowed to speak or share their point of view. While most Americans can contemplate such a scenario playing out in another country, this is what has been happening in Tennessee.” http://tinyurl.com/mfdn8lm


TEXAS PRIMARY TESTS TEA PARTY – Nathan Koppel writes for the Wall Street Journal: “Texans head to the polls Tuesday in the first primary of the year, an election which will show whether several prominent Republican lawmakers can fend off antiestablishment challengers. It’s also expected to provide the first big test of a tough new voter-identification law. … The most consequential primary battle involves U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, who faces several Republican challengers and stirred up resentment among many conservatives in Texas last month, when he joined Democrats to vote to increase the government’s borrowing authority. …


– “Mr. Cornyn remains a decided favorite in the contest, political experts said, largely because his most well-known challenger, U.S. Rep. Steve Stockman, has alienated tea-party groups by running a lackluster campaign in which he has made few public appearances. …


Rep. Pete Sessions is facing a test from Katrina Pierson, a Dallas area tea-party activist who has received support from tea-party groups statewide.” http://on.wsj.com/1dWT0s9


– REP. RALPH HALL, 90 years old and the oldest member of Congress, is facing his toughest fight yet, writes POLITICO’S Jose DelReal: http://politi.co/MKJOQ9


SCOTT BROWN: ATTACKS PRODDING ME TO RUN – POLITICO’s Manu Raju caught up with the former senator in the Capitol: “Scott Brown has been barraged by Democratic attacks as he decides whether to run for the Senate in New Hampshire. Those attacks, he says, are only encouraging him to get into the race. …[T]he former Massachusetts senator said he was still seriously weighing whether to run in New Hampshire against Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and would ‘probably’ make a decision before the June filing deadline. But Democratic TV ads blistering him on the airwaves – clearly intended to make him think twice about jumping in – are having the opposite effect, he said. ‘They keep running these negative ads and crushing my integrity and distorting my votes and the like — almost antagonizing me, challenging me to get in,’ Brown told POLITICO. ‘Had they left me alone, I may feel a bit different. But they didn’t.’” http://politi.co/1mS5NWb


LANDRIEU NOW BACKS HOUSE FLOOD BILL – Bruce Alpert reports for the Times-Picayune: “Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., on Monday endorsed a House flood insurance bill that she called ‘far from perfect’ but sufficient to provide real protections against unaffordable premium increases. If the bill passes the House, as expected, Landrieu said she would urge the Senate to pass it. ‘It looks like victory is close,’ Landrieu said. House leaders tentatively set debate to begin Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. central time, with a vote possible Tuesday night or Wednesday. … Landrieu lashed out at a statement last week by a leader of the conservative R Street Institute, that congressional leaders are moving away from the Biggert-Waters Act for political reasons, with Democrats wanting to help Landrieu’s re-election efforts and Republicans wanting to assist her main GOP challenger, Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-Baton Rouge.” http://bit.ly/1fXwmEh


– CASSIDY, in a statement, made it clear Landrieu had endorsed legislation that he himself had co-authored: “I thank Senators Vitter and Landrieu for supporting the Grimm-Cassidy substitute amendment to the Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act.  A broad coalition of homebuilders, bankers, realtors, business and civic leaders support the long-term, lasting relief afforded by the Grimm-Cassidy Amendment.”


MEMBERS TRADE DOWN FOR LOWER-PROFILE JOBS – National Journal’s Scott Bland reports: “Washington has become so toxic these days that one member of Congress is leaving after just one term—to run for a position in local government. After only a year in office, Democratic Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod of California plotted her escape from the House to seek a seat on the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors. If she is successful, Negrete McLeod will become at least the second member of Congress in two years to move straight from federal government to a smaller, local constituency. Former Rep. Todd Platts, R-Pa., is now known locally as Judge Todd Platts, ever since he won a seat on the York County Court of Common Pleas in 2013, a year after leaving the House. Meanwhile, GOP Rep. Tim Griffin is leaving the House after two terms to seek a decidedly less high-profile position, running for Arkansas lieutenant governor.” http://bit.ly/1kum2XT


MONDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – We had a tie: Paul Hays and Claude Marx correctly answered just seconds apart that William Holden was the Oscar-winning actor who was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Goodman has today’s question: Name the person who served simultaneously as a state first lady and a member of the House. 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




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT –SCREEN MOMENT – U.S. Threatens sanctions against Russia, Hill preps Ukraine aid package – Potential Sinema rival: Don"t switch districts

Boehner: "Most irresponsible budget yet"


John Boehner is pictured. | Getty

He says the president has ‘given up’ on addressing fiscal challenges. | Getty





Congressional Republicans were quick to criticize President Barack Obama’s fiscal 2015 budget on Tuesday, arguing that the document does little to curb government spending while hiking taxes.


Though Obama’s budget proposal is largely meaningless in practice, it gave lawmakers an opportunity to either defend the president’s economic policy agenda or jump on him for spending and taxing too much.







Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) called Obama’s latest plan “perhaps his most irresponsible budget yet.”


(Earlier on POLITICO: Obama releases $ 3.9 trillion budget)


“This budget is a clear sign this president has given up on any efforts to address our serious fiscal challenges that are undermining the future of our kids and grandkids,” the House’s top Republican said in a statement.


The GOP repeatedly lamented that Obama’s budget did little to control spending for entitlement programs. And they jumped on Obama for not abiding by a two-year budget agreement written by two key lawmakers in December that helped return Capitol Hill to some sense of fiscal normalcy.


The president’s budget released Tuesday totals about $ 3.9 trillion, and its policy proposals reflect much of the economic opportunity agenda that has become a centerpiece of the Democratic election-year strategy both on and off Capitol Hill. Obama calls for increasing taxes on the wealthy, expanding tax credits for the poor and middle class and broadens government social programs.


(PHOTOS: What’s in Obama’s 2015 budget?)


House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who struck that deal with Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray (D-Wash.), was also highly critical of Obama’s budget document, calling it “yet another disappointment” that “reinforces the status quo” on spending.


“This budget isn’t a serious document; it’s a campaign brochure,” Ryan said in a statement. “In divided government, we need leadership and collaboration. And in this budget, we have neither.”


Those jabs were echoed by Senate Republicans. Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, dismissed Obama’s plan as a declaration that “deficits don’t matter, debt doesn’t matter, and that reality itself doesn’t matter.”


(Transcript and video: Obama’s FY2015 budget remarks)


And South Dakota Sen. John Thune, the third-ranking Senate Republican, accused Obama of having “already given up” on trying to address the nation’s economic challenges and said the budget “merely panders to his political base.”


“Despite the fact that household income is down by $ 3,600 since the president took office, and the labor participation rate is at its lowest level since Jimmy Carter was president, President Obama is proposing more of the same policies to grow the government at the expense of the middle class,” Thune said.


Ryan, from his perch as the leader of the House Budget Committee, will lead efforts from House Republicans to write a new budget this year, which Boehner said Tuesday will be released “in the coming weeks.” Senate Democrats have written off writing a budget this year, arguing that the two-year agreement passed by Congress earlier this year negates any need to produce a new fiscal blueprint this spring.


Murray, for her part, said she “strongly” supported Obama’s budget and said it builds on the agreement that she reached with Ryan, not breaks it.


“The two-year bipartisan budget deal signed into law in December was a strong step in the right direction, but it shouldn’t be the last step we take,” Murray said.


Obama’s budget has no pretense that it’s meant to be a compromise document with Republicans. For instance, it no longer includes a request for enacting chained CPI, which would effectively reduce the amount of benefits received for Social Security and similar federal initiatives. That proposal, long loathed by the liberal wing of the Democratic Party, was meant to be an olive branch of sorts to Republicans in previous years.


Obama’s decision to insert policy provisions such as chained CPI in the past has earned him blowback from members of his own party, but on Tuesday, Democratic lawmakers largely praised the president’s budget vision for being consistent with Democratic ideals.


“The president’s budget reflects the top priorities of the American people: creating jobs, closing the opportunity gap, strengthening the middle class, and building an economy that works for everyone,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said. “This budget is a clear statement of our values as a nation, a nation that believes in fairness, opportunity, and hard work as the bedrock of our way of life.”


House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) told reporters that Obama’s budget showed a “continuing commitment to economic opportunity, promoting job growth and strengthening national security — all three of which are priority items for us.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Boehner: "Most irresponsible budget yet"

BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT –SCREEN MOMENT – U.S. Threatens sanctions against Russia, Hill preps Ukraine aid package – Potential Sinema rival: Don"t switch districts


BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT-SCREEN MOMENT – Our own Darren Samuelsohn explains: “President Barack Obama is facing a major foreign policy test — but on Tuesday he’ll have to pause for the ritualistic domestic politics of the budget. Unlike Vladimir Putin, budget politics are predictable: Obama’s fiscal blueprint isn’t going anywhere in Congress, and it’s designed primarily as an appeal to his Democratic base in a midterm election year. The president will unveil the $ 3 trillion-plus fiscal plan at 11:30 a.m. at a Washington elementary school, while most of official Washington’s attention is halfway around the world. …


– “The budget will follow on themes from his State of the Union address of economic inequality. It will avoid calling for a big change to entitlements that’s been widely panned by liberals and instead seek to expand a popular tax credit to middle-class workers without children. It also suggests slashing the Pentagon and beefing up spending for early childhood education, highway repairs and combating climate change. Budget politics are often Kabuki theater at their best — this year will be no different. After all, the critical spending caps that will help keep the government open are already in place, and both sides have reasons to avoid tough votes on appropriations bills before November. Yet, as tradition dictates, Washington is sure to proceed with a mad dash to analyze — and pick apart — most of the goodies stuffed into the latest White House budget.” http://politi.co/1dWLr4G


THE DAY AHEAD — 8 a.m.: Copies of the fiscal year 2015 budget will be delivered to Capitol Hill in Dirksen 608 and Cannon 207.


– 11:30 a.m.: President Obama tours a classroom and delivers remarks on his 2015 budget at Powell Elementary School in Washington, D.C.’s Petworth neighborhood.


– 12:45 p.m.: OMB Director Sylvia Matthews Burwell holds a news conference at EEOB about the president’s budget. She’ll be joined by Jason Furman, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Cecilia Muñoz, director of the Domestic Policy Council and Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council.


“Obama budget sets up a debate on poverty,” A1 below the fold, By the Washington Post’s Zachary A. Goldfarb and Robert Costa: “In his latest request to Congress, Obama plans to seek $ 56 billion in fresh spending to expand educational offerings for preschoolers and job training for laid-off workers … Meanwhile, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (Wis.) is at work on a GOP budget plan that aims to overhaul the nation’s welfare system, in part by cutting spending on programs that Ryan argues have locked people into poverty.”


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


U.S. THREATENS SANCTIONS AGAINST RUSSIA – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “The United States prepared Monday to impose sanctions on high-level Russian officials involved in the military occupation of Crimea, as the escalating crisis in Ukraine prompted turmoil in global markets, pounding the Russian ruble and driving up energy prices. The Obama administration suspended military ties to Russia, including exercises, port visits and planning meetings, just a day after calling off trade talks. If Moscow does not reverse course, officials said they would ban visas and freeze assets of select Russian officials in the chain of command as well as target state-run financial institutions. …


– “The besieged Kiev government said Monday that the Russians had deployed 16,000 troops in the region over the past week and had demanded that Ukrainian forces there surrender within hours or face armed assault. While Russia denied it had issued any ultimatums, it was clearly moving to strengthen its control over Crimea, the largely Russian-speaking peninsula in southern Ukraine where Moscow has long maintained a military base.” http://nyti.ms/1dWPK03


HILL PREPS AID PACKAGE FOR UKRAINE – John Bresnahan reports for POLITICO: “House and Senate leaders in both parties are promising quick action on potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. economic aid to Ukraine along with possible sanctions against Russia after its invasion of Crimea. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said he had spoken to House committee chairmen on Monday about assembling a Ukranian aid package, including possible loan guarantees. …


– “House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-Calif.) has already scheduled a hearing on the Ukrainian crisis for Thursday. … Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), however, cautioned that Obama should secure European support for any sanctions against Russia before the United States attempts to impose them.” http://politi.co/1cyPWly


BBC News: “Global markets steady as Ukraine impact fears ease” http://bbc.in/1jO6zyN


BOEHNER: REELECTION AS SPEAKER ‘WON’T EVEN BE CLOSE’ – Sheila McLaughlin and Deirdre Shesgreen report for the Cincinnati Enquirer: “West Chester Republican John Boehner said he is confident he can win a third term as House speaker, despite his rocky three years in the post and his narrow re-election to that leadership slot in 2013. ‘It won’t even be close,’ Boehner said of his re-election as speaker during an hourlong exclusive interview Monday with The Enquirer. ‘I frankly think I’m in better shape with my own caucus than I have been any time in the last three years. … I think they understand me better.’” He also called Putin a “thug.” http://cin.ci/1hCeBL5


POSSIBLE RIVAL TELLS SINEMA: DON’T SWITCH DISTRICTS – Arizona state Rep. Ruben Gallego, in Washington yesterday pitching Phoenix as a host city for the 2016 DNC, made time for a round of interviews about his own congressional run, including with Roll Call’s Anny Livingston: “A Democrat running for the seat of retiring Arizona Rep. Ed Pastor said Sunday he would not drop his bid in deference to freshman Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, a fellow Democrat who may opt to run for the newly opened seat instead of her own. Pastor’s 7th District is solidly Democratic, while any Democrat running for Sinema’s neighboring 9th District could face a tough general election fight every cycle until the next round of redistricting. Because of that, speculation about the possibility that Sinema might move to the open district emerged immediately after Pastor’s Feb. 27 retirement announcement. …


– Gallego said he’ll run no matter what Sinema does. “‘I’m a big supporter of Kyrsten Sinema,’ Gallego said. ‘I got to work for her, work with her. I’ve donated to her campaign the first time around, the second time around, and I hope she stays in District 9 because she is the right moderate, business-oriented voice for that district.’ He added: ‘But, if she decides to move to District 7, we will have a very spirited race and I will run against her.’” http://bit.ly/1kuezYK


– Former White House staffer Ronnie Cho, a Phoenix native, is “seriously considering” running for the Pastor seat, reports the Washington Examiner’s Tim Mak. Cho had a memorable role in an HBO documentary about the Obama campaign. If he wins, he would become the first Korean-American Democrat in Congress. http://washex.am/1lw9U8Q


GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 4, 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 @RepJeffDuncan and @RubenGallego.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is back at 2 p.m. today but both votes and weekly caucus meetings have been postponed until Wednesday due to travel issues related to the snow storm.


The House also meets at 2 p.m. with votes expected about 6:30 p.m. on several bills considered under suspension of the rules: The Home Heating Emergency Assistance Through Transportation (HHEATT) Act, Energy Efficiency Improvement Act, United States-Israel Strategic Partnership Act, a resolution supporting the people of Venezuela as they protest peacefully for democratic change and calling to end the violence, and a homeowners flood insurance bill.


AROUND THE HILL – Copies of the fiscal year 2015 budget will be delivered to Capitol Hill at 8 a.m. in Dirksen 608. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer holds a pen and pad with reporters at 11 a.m. in H-144. Also at 11, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. Rep. Joe Crowley, vice chair of the Democratic Caucus, will deliver remarks at the Aspen Institute’s “Working Towards a Secure Retirement: Strengthening Our Nation’s Savings System” congressional briefing at 1:45 p.m. in Rayburn B-318. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Dave Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


SEN. BOB CORKER (R-TENN.), writing in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, accuses the auto union of trying to muzzle public officials: “Picture an election where an entity is given nearly unfettered access to voters for two years and then is allowed to call for a surprise vote with only a few days’ notice. Then imagine that the entity loses the vote and complains that ‘outside forces’—who happen to be community leaders—should not have been allowed to speak or share their point of view. While most Americans can contemplate such a scenario playing out in another country, this is what has been happening in Tennessee.” http://tinyurl.com/mfdn8lm


TEXAS PRIMARY TESTS TEA PARTY – Nathan Koppel writes for the Wall Street Journal: “Texans head to the polls Tuesday in the first primary of the year, an election which will show whether several prominent Republican lawmakers can fend off antiestablishment challengers. It’s also expected to provide the first big test of a tough new voter-identification law. … The most consequential primary battle involves U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, who faces several Republican challengers and stirred up resentment among many conservatives in Texas last month, when he joined Democrats to vote to increase the government’s borrowing authority. …


– “Mr. Cornyn remains a decided favorite in the contest, political experts said, largely because his most well-known challenger, U.S. Rep. Steve Stockman, has alienated tea-party groups by running a lackluster campaign in which he has made few public appearances. …


Rep. Pete Sessions is facing a test from Katrina Pierson, a Dallas area tea-party activist who has received support from tea-party groups statewide.” http://on.wsj.com/1dWT0s9


– REP. RALPH HALL, 90 years old and the oldest member of Congress, is facing his toughest fight yet, writes POLITICO’S Jose DelReal: http://politi.co/MKJOQ9


SCOTT BROWN: ATTACKS PRODDING ME TO RUN – POLITICO’s Manu Raju caught up with the former senator in the Capitol: “Scott Brown has been barraged by Democratic attacks as he decides whether to run for the Senate in New Hampshire. Those attacks, he says, are only encouraging him to get into the race. …[T]he former Massachusetts senator said he was still seriously weighing whether to run in New Hampshire against Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and would ‘probably’ make a decision before the June filing deadline. But Democratic TV ads blistering him on the airwaves – clearly intended to make him think twice about jumping in – are having the opposite effect, he said. ‘They keep running these negative ads and crushing my integrity and distorting my votes and the like — almost antagonizing me, challenging me to get in,’ Brown told POLITICO. ‘Had they left me alone, I may feel a bit different. But they didn’t.’” http://politi.co/1mS5NWb


LANDRIEU NOW BACKS HOUSE FLOOD BILL – Bruce Alpert reports for the Times-Picayune: “Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., on Monday endorsed a House flood insurance bill that she called ‘far from perfect’ but sufficient to provide real protections against unaffordable premium increases. If the bill passes the House, as expected, Landrieu said she would urge the Senate to pass it. ‘It looks like victory is close,’ Landrieu said. House leaders tentatively set debate to begin Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. central time, with a vote possible Tuesday night or Wednesday. … Landrieu lashed out at a statement last week by a leader of the conservative R Street Institute, that congressional leaders are moving away from the Biggert-Waters Act for political reasons, with Democrats wanting to help Landrieu’s re-election efforts and Republicans wanting to assist her main GOP challenger, Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-Baton Rouge.” http://bit.ly/1fXwmEh


– CASSIDY, in a statement, made it clear Landrieu had endorsed legislation that he himself had co-authored: “I thank Senators Vitter and Landrieu for supporting the Grimm-Cassidy substitute amendment to the Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act.  A broad coalition of homebuilders, bankers, realtors, business and civic leaders support the long-term, lasting relief afforded by the Grimm-Cassidy Amendment.”


MEMBERS TRADE DOWN FOR LOWER-PROFILE JOBS – National Journal’s Scott Bland reports: “Washington has become so toxic these days that one member of Congress is leaving after just one term—to run for a position in local government. After only a year in office, Democratic Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod of California plotted her escape from the House to seek a seat on the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors. If she is successful, Negrete McLeod will become at least the second member of Congress in two years to move straight from federal government to a smaller, local constituency. Former Rep. Todd Platts, R-Pa., is now known locally as Judge Todd Platts, ever since he won a seat on the York County Court of Common Pleas in 2013, a year after leaving the House. Meanwhile, GOP Rep. Tim Griffin is leaving the House after two terms to seek a decidedly less high-profile position, running for Arkansas lieutenant governor.” http://bit.ly/1kum2XT


MONDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – We had a tie: Paul Hays and Claude Marx correctly answered just seconds apart that William Holden was the Oscar-winning actor who was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Goodman has today’s question: Name the person who served simultaneously as a state first lady and a member of the House. 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




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



BUDGET DAY: ANOTHER SPLIT –SCREEN MOMENT – U.S. Threatens sanctions against Russia, Hill preps Ukraine aid package – Potential Sinema rival: Don"t switch districts