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Jennifer Harper

Jennifer Harper

A graduate of Syracuse University, Jennifer Harper writes the daily Inside the Beltway column and provides additional coverage of breaking national news, plus long-term trends in politics, media issues, public opinion, popular culture, Hollywood foibles and “eureka” moments in health and science.

She has been a frequent broadcast commentator on CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, C-SPAN, Voice of America, Citadel Broadcasting, Talk Radio Network and other news organizations. Born in Elizabeth, N.J., Ms. Harper grew up in Texas and arrived in Washington in time for Watergate -- and has been tracking the political and media landscape ever since.

She is an active member of the American Federation of TV Radio Artists and Screen Actors Guild. She has won 14 journalism awards during her years at The Washington Times.

To read Jennifer Harper's Inside the Beltway columns, click here. Contact her at jharper@washingtontimes.com.

Articles by Jennifer Harper

** FILE ** Rep. Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee Republican. (Associated Press)

Inside the Beltway: The six-million dollar traveling president

President Obama is currently on an overseas excursion that takes him to five foreign nations in five days. That adds up to about 29 hours of flying time aboard the magnificent but pricey Air Force One, which now costs $228,288 an hour to operate, up from about $179,750 in recent years. So say the meticulous watchdogs at the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, who figure the total of this particular jaunt to be $6,620,352. Published March 24, 2014

** FILE ** Sheldon Adelson. (AP Photo, File)

Inside the Beltway: Republican power dynamics — it’s complicated

Who's in charge of the elite Republican powerhouse, where strategy, money and mettle drive a party to victory? There's no master commander, but rather an ever-changing cast of political titans who bring their personal prowess to the table. Published March 23, 2014

Illustration by Greg Groesch/The Washington Times

Democrats insist the Grand Old Party is just the Same Old Party

A cautionary tale: Just 24 hours after the Republican National Committee's launched its ebullient 2014 comeback tour, the Democratic National Committee was all over it. Like a big dog. Republican claims of a productive, reinvented party were pulled to pieces by their insta-critics. "The Grand Old Party Is the Same Old Party," the Democrats' designated rapid response team declared in a new report. Published March 20, 2014

Army Staff Sgt. Lawrence Woods will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery on Friday, nearly five decades after he was shot down over Vietnam. (Woods family)

Inside the Beltway: Run, Ted, run: Shifting out of cruise

It was inevitable. As was the case with Ben Carson, a grass-roots effort to draft Sen. Ted Cruz has been launched by those eager to see the Texas Republican and his plainspoken, but stringent policies enter the 2016 White House race. The early-bird political action committee founded by one Raz Shafer — a former Cruz staffer — is on message and offers a succinct challenge to conservative voters. Published March 19, 2014

Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, interviewed at The Washington Times, says he will not release his tax returns because he has suffered losses in recent years. debates. He also said he has more executive experience than Mitt Romney and President Obama combined, but needs to get into national debates for voters to understand that he’s the choice for voters unhappy with both of them. (Raymond Thompson/The Washington Times)

Libertarians strut their stuff: ‘We pay for our own conventions’

While the major political parties strike a threatening pose and hiss at one another, the Libertarians have already organized a national convention set for late June in Columbus, Ohio - ironically a city under heavy consideration as a site for the 2016 Republican National Convention. Their motto for the event: "Character Matters." Published March 19, 2014

The Republican Party of Virginia is ready to rumble with Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, this time over his instant fundraising techniques.

Inside the Beltway: Virginia Republicans at the ready

The Republican Party of Virginia is a feisty lot, indeed. After the organization discovered a certain governor's aggressive and well-organized fundraising plans, these GOPers are ready to rumble. Published March 18, 2014

Members of Battery A, 7th Battalion, 8th Artillery reading newspapers in Bien Hoa, Vietnam, April 29, 1970 (Official U.S. Army photo)

Following the news becomes a sport: Welcome to the ‘personal news cycle’

Americans like their news the way they like their coffee: fixed just so, at a certain temperature and strength, and at certain times. And they like the news. No, really. The nation has not been overwhelmed by too much news. Sixty percent of us, in fact, say it's now easier to keep up with the news than it was five years ago. And an amazing 90 percent actually revealed they "enjoy" keeping up with the news, and use at least four or five sources to find it. Published March 18, 2014

Gary Johnson, the Libertarian presidential hopeful, heads to Twitter on Tuesday for a Tweet Chat at 9 p.m. ET, he says, for his 122,000 followers and anyone else. (The Washington Times)

Inside the Beltway: Republicans on the march

The Grand Old Party has been trying to reinvent and rebrand itself for a year, readying for combat in the 2014 midterms and beyond. The herculean effort is working. The Republican National Committee has made smart new hires in the social media and digital news realm, all tasked with lean and nimble outreaches to an increasingly anxious electorate. Published March 17, 2014

Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican, came out as the favored Republican candidate for a White House run in 2016 in a recent CNN/ORC poll, garnering 16 percent of the support. (Associated Press)

Inside the Beltway: And the password is panic

Observers are calmly standing back and taking in the dramatic tableau unfolding in front of them. The Democratic Party is edging toward panic mode, a revelation now emanating from both critics and the mainstream media in radioactive waves. Published March 16, 2014

Gaudy green revelers crammed the oak-shaded sidewalks of downtown Savannah for the St. Patrick's Day parade, Saturday, March, 16, 2013, in Savannah, Ga. The St. Patrick's Day celebration is a 189-year-old tradition in Georgia's oldest city. (AP Photo/Stephen Morton)

O’Done with It: Irish Americans protest ‘negative stereotyping’ as bawdy drunks

They're done with images of tipsy colleens and belligerent leprechauns. Some Irish Americans have grown weary of "negative stereotyping" in popular culture that consistently depicts their demographic as bawdy drunks and hooligans. Now they've done something about it. The Ancient Order of Hibernians - the nation's largest Irish Catholic fraternal organization - have launched what they deem an "anti-defamation" action. Published March 16, 2014

The Cowboy and Indian Alliance is coming to the nation's capital for a "Protect and Reject" march against the Keystone XL pipeline — and they're bringing both horses and agenda. (Mary Anne Andrei/Bold Nebraska)

Inside the Beltway: Can Pope Francis soothe a savage Congress?

He closed the brief letter like this: "With every good wish to Your Holiness, I am, Sincerely Yours, John Boehner." The recipient was Pope Francis, the author House Speaker John Boehner, who has asked the pontiff to address a joint session of Congress in the future. The simple but formal gesture promoted more than 1,000 press mentions in the space of an hour when it was released on Thursday; the topic was subject to interpretation. Published March 13, 2014

Some political strategists say Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is seriously being groomed as a White House contender in 2016. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Inside the Beltway: A new interest in Rahm Emanuel for 2016?

The recent Conservative Political Action Conference provides a forum for big names. But it's also a platform for the murmurs and asides from political strategists who've been everywhere and done everything, and like to speculate. Such is the case when the potential presidential candidacy of Hillary Clinton was parsed by a pair of insiders. Published March 11, 2014

Former CBS investigative reporter Sharyl Attkisson (CBS via Associated Press) **FILE**

Inside the Beltway: Weather or not to wake Congress on climate change

Chatter about climate change over a nice cup of coffee? Indeed, Senate Democrats have organized a cozy all-night talkathon that will last Monday night into Tuesday at the U.S. Capitol, meant to "wake up Congress to the danger of climate change." Published March 10, 2014