Sean Lengell
Articles by Sean Lengell
Transportation Secretary LaHood: Sequester means furloughs
Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood warned Sunday that furloughs will be imminent in his department if the across-the-board sequester spending cuts kick in Friday as scheduled. Published February 24, 2013
White House ups rhetoric on dangers of sequester
The Obama administration amped up its offensive Sunday with Republicans over the $85 billion in across-the-board federal spending cuts scheduled to kick in Friday, releasing fresh warnings of a "real impact on people's lives" despite GOP claims the White House is exaggerating the potential ill effects. Published February 24, 2013
Accord paves way for immigrants to legally take ‘lesser-skilled’ jobs
Big Business and Big Labor cleared a big hurdle Thursday, as the Chamber of Commerce and AFL-CIO agreed in principle on a plan to allow "lesser skilled" immigrants to work in the U.S. legally, a key sticking point for a final deal on overhauling the nation's immigration laws. Published February 21, 2013
For South Carolina’s Mark Sanford, House bid is a race for redemption
Mark Sanford is asking South Carolinians for their forgiveness -- and their votes. The disgraced former Republican governor, who quietly left office two years ago after a bizarre high-profile extramarital affair in 2009, is back on the ballot, running in a March 19 special-election primary to fill the House seat vacated by Tim Scott's December appointment to the Senate. Published February 20, 2013
Nebraska’s Johanns joins senators not running for re-election
Nebraska Republican Sen. Mike Johanns won't seek a second term next year, saying he wants a "quieter time" with his wife and family after three decades in public office. Published February 18, 2013
Nebraska’s Johanns won’t seek re-election to Senate
Nebraska Republican Sen. Mike Johanns won't seek a second term next year, saying he wants a "quieter time" with his wife and family after three decades in public office. Published February 18, 2013
Reports: Jesse Jackson Jr. agrees to plea deal
Embattled former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. of Illinois has agreed to plead guilty and faces possible jail time as part of a deal with federal authorities investigating accusations he misused campaign money, Chicago news outlets reported Friday. Published February 8, 2013
Senate loads up renewal of act to protect women
The Senate is plowing this week toward passage of a bill aimed at domestic abuse for the second time in two years — but with provisions involving gay partners, illegal immigrants and jurisdictional disputes on Indian lands, the legislation faces an uncertain future in the Republican-run House. Published February 6, 2013
Murkowski rolls out energy-policy reforms
The Senate energy committee's top Republican rolled out a plan Monday for broad policy reforms that call for increased domestic oil drilling and loosening federal regulations, an effort designed to make the country largely energy self-sufficient by the end of the decade. Published February 4, 2013
Sequester also to hit nondefense spending
While the Pentagon will take the brunt of the $85 billion across-the-board automatic spending cuts scheduled to kick in March 1, about half of the "sequesters" are poised to bite domestic programs — from child-nutrition programs to air-traffic control to the Internal Revenue Service. Published January 31, 2013
Let the sequesters begin, some Republicans say
Congressional Republicans are preparing to let $85 billion in automatic spending cuts begin to bite March 1, saying they have become convinced that letting the "sequesters" take effect is the only way they will be able to wrangle real spending cuts from President Obama. Published January 30, 2013
Online voter signup gains favor
If Capitol Hill Democrats have their way, every American soon will have the option to grab their laptop, plop down on the couch and register to vote. Yet unlike other hot-button voting rights issues, such as early voting and same-day registration, the idea is gaining momentum among some state-level Republicans. Published January 29, 2013
Possible contenders weigh succeeding Chambliss
Potential front-runners to replace retiring Sen. Saxby Chambliss aren't ready to officially jump into the race for the Georgia Republican's seat but they're not denying interest in the job. Published January 28, 2013
Chambliss, citing frustration with Washington, to leave Senate in 2014
Sen. Saxby Chambliss announced Friday he won't seek a third term in 2014, saying he was frustrated with President Obama's lack of leadership and Washington's chronic political gridlock. Published January 25, 2013
‘Nuclear option’ averted as Senate leaders reach agreement on filibuster rules
Senate leaders struck a bipartisan agreement Thursday to preserve the chamber's filibuster but which limits how and when the minority party can use it. Published January 24, 2013
From Day One, Senate’s time stands still
In the real world, it's late January, the days last 24 hours, and people are doing their jobs. But in the crazy confines of the Senate it's still Jan. 3 — literally. Published January 23, 2013
Reid still vowing filibuster changes
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says he's determined to move forward this week with proposed filibuster reforms — with or without the help of Republicans. Published January 22, 2013
Bipartisanship makes a brief Hill appearance
A rare and likely fleeting show of bipartisanship enveloped Capitol Hill on Monday as members of both parties congratulated President Obama on his second inauguration, though some Republicans tempered their praise with concerns about the tasks ahead. Published January 21, 2013
Democrats press vote reforms
Fresh from the November elections in which both parties complained that voters' rights had been curtailed, House Democrats are pushing election reforms as a central tenet of their legislative agenda for the new Congress. Published January 17, 2013
Sandy funding passes House; GOP is denied cost offsets
The House on Tuesday approved $50 billion in emergency funds for Superstorm Sandy relief, rejecting conservatives' plea to offset the spending with cuts as most lawmakers said worries about the deficit need to take a back seat when natural disasters strike. Published January 15, 2013