Sean Lengell
Articles by Sean Lengell
Debt panel facing CBO heat
The bipartisan supercommittee's proposal for addressing the nation's debt woes is due two weeks from Wednesday, but the panel already has hit a deadline that Congress' official scorekeeper says should be met to ensure the numbers add up. Published November 8, 2011
Schumer predicts supercommittee will fail
The Senate's No. 3 Democrat said Monday he thinks the supercommittee won't reach its goal of finding significant budget savings, saying Republicans' unwillingness to compromise is to blame. Published November 7, 2011
Redistricting sets up tussles for many congressional seats
The last time California redrew its congressional districts, Republicans and Democrats cut a deal to preserve all the incumbents, essentially erasing the country's biggest electoral fishing ground from the map in 2002. Published November 6, 2011
Debt panel’s inactivity stirs unease on Hill
As pressure mounts on the congressional supercommittee to reach a debt-reduction deal, Capitol Hill lawmakers - from House leaders to rank-and-file members - appeared less than confident Thursday the panel would make its Thanksgiving deadline. Published November 3, 2011
Experienced deficit cutters urge supercommittee to triple its goal
The co-chairmen of two past deficit reduction panels warned the congressional supercommittee on Tuesday that the nation could face economic turmoil unless it went "big" and more than tripled its minimum goal of finding $1.2 trillion in government savings. Published November 1, 2011
Bipartisan House group tells debt panel to ‘go big’
Pressure on the congressional debt-reduction supercommittee to "go big" is growing, as a bipartisan group of House members is urging the panel to find savings far beyond its $1.5 trillion goal. Published October 30, 2011
Divergent debt plans highlight partisan divide
Two very different debt-reduction proposals leaked to the media this week show that Democrats and Republicans on the supercommittee are still miles apart on a deal, as the clock ticks down toward a Thanksgiving deadline for a unified plan. Published October 27, 2011
Supercommittee stays opaque
The congressional debt-reduction panel met publicly for the first time in more than a month Wednesday but offered little public evidence of making progress as the clock ticks toward a Thanksgiving deadline. Published October 26, 2011
Democrats don’t prefer automatic debt cuts
The House's No. 2 Democrat says the nation will suffer if the congressional debt reduction committee fails and mandatory spending cuts kick in, staking a position that the panel must reach its goal of finding ways to slash $1.5 trillion from the federal debt. Published October 25, 2011
Calls for debt panel to ‘go big’ get louder
Calls for the congressional debt reduction supercommittee to "go big" are amping up, as financial and government analysts say the panel's aim of finding more than $1 trillion in savings may not be enough to steady the nation's wobbly economy. Published October 24, 2011
Debt-cuts panel gets conflicting Hill input
The congressional "supercommittee" — the bipartisan group of 12 House and Senate members tasked with finding ways to slash the federal debt — has been flooded with often conflicting suggestions from colleagues eager to tell the panel how to do its job. Published October 18, 2011
South Korean president hails trade deal, U.S. partnership
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak personally thanked Congress Thursday for ratifying a long-awaited free trade agreement between the U.S. and his country the day before, saying the deal strengthened what already was "one of the closest, most important economic relationships in the world." Published October 13, 2011
Obama vows to continue fight for jobs bill
President Obama vowed Wednesday he "will not take no for an answer" from Republican senators who stood unified against his $447 billion jobs bill, as Democratic leaders regrouped and moved forward with a Plan B. Published October 12, 2011
Boehner still defiant on China currency bill
The speaker's opposition clouds the measure's chances of getting a vote in the GOP-controlled House. Published October 12, 2011
Senate OKs measure to hit China on valuation
Legislation designed to punish China for its currency valuation passed the Senate on Tuesday with bipartisan support, though the top Republican in the House has vowed to kill the bill. Published October 11, 2011
Supporters push Paul to straw poll triumph
Rep. Ron Paul easily won a Republican presidential candidate straw poll Saturday at the conservative Values Voter Summit in Washington, while two of the most popular candidates in the race — Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney — finished near the bottom. Published October 8, 2011
Romney woos conservatives : ‘I will not surrender America’s role’
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, hoping to boost his lackluster image among conservatives, evoked a message filled with God and country themes before an influential gathering of conservative voters Saturday. Published October 8, 2011
Bachmann: U.S. could lose ‘superpower’ status
Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann said President Obama's handling of the economy has pushed the United States to the brink of losing its role as a superpower, a scenario she said would undermine the country's military strength and compromise national security. Published October 7, 2011
Cain, Gingrich: Same goal, different tones
Herman Cain and Newt Gingrich have a singular mission: to win the Republican Party's presidential nomination and defeat President Obama next year. But in back-to-back speeches Friday at a gathering of conservative activists in Washington, the two Georgians took widely divergent approaches to spread their message. Published October 7, 2011
Perry: ‘American exceptionalism’ not dead
Texas Gov. Rick Perry stirred the Values Voter Summit by strongly defending family values. Published October 7, 2011