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Sean Lengell

Sean Lengell was a staff writer for The Washington Times.

Articles by Sean Lengell

associated press

House will put NLRB in its cross hairs

The Republican-led House will take up a measure this week that would conditionally shut down the National Labor Relations Board in a move aimed at stopping President Obama from tilting the panel too far to the political left. Published April 8, 2013

A small plane takes off past the control tower at Troutdale Airport in Troutdale, Ore., on March 7, 2013. (Associated Press)

Sequester leads FAA to close 149 air traffic sites

The Federal Aviation Administration on Friday announced its final list of 149 air traffic control facilities that will close nationwide due to the automatic federal spending cuts that kicked in earlier this month. Published March 22, 2013

“You’re using the money twice. You’re providing cuts that you’re now telling me are used to pay down the sequester,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions to Sen. Patty Murray of Washington. (Associated Press)

Sessions questions math in Democrats’ budget

Forget passing a Senate budget. Senate Democrats and Republicans can't even agree on basic numbers such as what it means to reduce the deficit by $1 trillion — a disagreement that underscored the difficulty of agreeing on a 10-year budget. Published March 14, 2013

associated press
Arizona requires evidence of citizenship in order to register and at the polls in order to vote, “and we don’t think either one of those things are unreasonable,” Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett says.

Voter ID case heads to Supreme Court

An Arizona law designed to stop illegal immigrants from voting hangs in the balance, as the Supreme Court will take up a landmark case this month on whether the state can demand would-be voters to prove they are citizens before casting ballots in federal elections. Published March 14, 2013

‘No sacred cows’ in Democratic spending plan

Four years after they last passed a budget through the Senate, Democrats announced a new blueprint for federal spending Wednesday that proposes significant tax increases, new stimulus spending and some budget cuts — making slight headway in controlling federal debt. Published March 13, 2013

**FILE** Caitlin J. Halligan (left), then a lawyer for New York, and David Boies, a lawyer for Court TV, talk in the Court of Appeals in Albany, N.Y., on April 27, 2005, before Boies represented a cable television channel in their suit against the state to reverse a ban on cameras in the courtroom. (Associated Press)

Lingering vacancies burden justice system; nominations lag, cases grow

A backlog of judicial vacancies at federal courts is straining the nation's justice system — delaying trials, increasing workloads for judges and posing a disincentive for talented lawyers from pursuing careers on the bench, legal analysts say. Published March 11, 2013

Halligan

GOP filibuster blocks key Obama judicial nominee

Senate Republicans on Wednesday delivered another blow to President Obama's ability to fill high-level federal judicial openings, using a filibuster to block Caitlin Halligan's nomination for a seat on the influential D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Published March 6, 2013

Democrats propose measure to raise minimum wage

Democrats in Congress proposed legislation Tuesday to boost the federal minimum wage to more than $10, going beyond what President Obama has proposed and arguing the working poor need the extra support amid a sour economy. Published March 5, 2013

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia

Scalia ‘racial’ comment on voting rights law draws fire

A suggestion by Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia that a key 1960s-era voting rights law aimed at ending Jim Crow-era voter discrimination against blacks perpetuates "racial entitlement" has drawn outrage from civil rights leaders and others. Published February 28, 2013

** FILE ** House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat, holds a  Jan. 23, 2013, news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington to discuss the reintroduction of the Violence Against Women Act. (Associated Press)

Congress renews law to protect women from violence

House Republicans leaders bowed to pressure Thursday and passed a new, Senate-written Violence Against Women Act, which adds protections to gay partners, illegal immigrants and victims on American Indian lands. Published February 28, 2013

**FILE** This photo shows the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court in a group portrait at the Supreme Court Building in Washington on Oct. 8, 2010. Seated from left to right are: Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice Antonin Scalia, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Associate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Standing, from left are: Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice Samuel Alito Jr., and Associate Justice Elena Kagan. (Associated Press)

Conservative court justice: Voting rights law perpetuates ‘racial entitlement’

Decades of civil-rights law hung in the balance Wednesday as the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case seeking to end the federal government's role as arbiter of states' decisions on how to run elections, with one conservative justice saying the role perpetuated "racial entitlement." Published February 27, 2013

Gay, illegal inclusions endanger violence act

An ongoing dispute on Capitol Hill over renewal of the Violence Against Women Act -- once among the most noncontroversial measures in Congress -- is heating up ahead of an expected House vote Thursday. Published February 26, 2013

Supreme Court to take key voting rights case

The Supreme Court this week will take up a potentially landmark case that could end almost five decades of Justice Department intervention that gives the federal government control over voting decisions in states and localities with a history of discrimination. Published February 25, 2013