Eric Holder And Darrell Issa Battle It Out
Longstanding animosities bubble to the surface during tense oversight hearing.
Longstanding animosities bubble to the surface during tense oversight hearing.
The White House confirms they asked Schumer to reintroduce the bill.
LOL, Government.
Eric Holder told Congress that his Deputy Attorney General signed off on secret subpoenas for AP phone records.
There’s little chance the IRS will enforce campaign finance laws now, say some advocates. Ennui is setting in. But some see hope down the road.
“If I was a Democratic hot-shot politician, I would primary her so fast,” says Stu Stevens. Hickenlooper 2016?
Has anyone ever seen these two in the same place at the same time?
Rep. Trey Radel wants his fellow Republicans to get outside the echo chamber — and gain an appreciation for N.W.A.
“I don’t want to jump to judgment here, because many of us did call on the administration to investigate leaks,” said Sen. John Cornyn. Majority Leader Harry Reid calls the move “inexcusable.”
“The repeal of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ was a monumental achievement for our military and for our country; however, it did not finish the entire job of ensuring that our gay and lesbian service members and their families are treated equally under the law,” the New Hampshire senator says.
Good effort! Good try!!
“I wouldn’t say that possibility doesn’t exist,” says Castro. But calls on Republicans to support it.
“Sometimes with the spotlight constantly on it as an issue can make it tougher,” says Rep. Castro.
The law, allowing same-sex couples to marry, takes effect Aug. 1. Minnesota is the 12th state, plus DC, to recognize marriage equality, following on the heels of passage in Rhode Island and Delaware.
DOJ officials stand by the decision to pull phone records for the nation’s largest wire service.
Carney says Obama’s agenda is still on track despite a bad couple weeks.
“The truth is, we have to get this straight, and they’re gonna have to get it straight, and there are going to be hearings until they do.”
Belo Corp. says what Larry Conners wrote “has nothing to do with our company or our television station. And we don’t condone that type of personal opinion being represented as a company or station opinion.”
BuzzFeed Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith moderates two conversations on the politics of immigration.
The blind Chinese dissident who escaped to New York broadens his critique of the Chinese government in Oslo. His family is being persecuted, he says.
To “avoid a potential appearance of a conflict of interest … I recused myself,” says the attorney general of the DOJ investigation into the Associated Press.
“Before I refuse to take your questions, I have an opening statement.”
The news of the DOJ phone-grab story broke at 4:26 p.m., but it wasn’t discussed on MSNBC until 7:37 p.m.
The decision of the National Council of Justice could be appealed to the Supreme Court. Same-sex couples in some parts of the country already can marry, but this decision would apply nationwide.
Immigration changes would be “far, far worse than Obamacare,” says King. And that’s saying something.
The defeated bill would have required approval from a federal court before reporters’ phone records were subpoenaed. Darrell Issa, who condemned the AP subpoena Monday, was one of only 21 House Members to vote against the bill.
KMOV’s Larry Conners says “the IRS has been pressuring me” since his April, 2012 interview with the president. “Can I prove it? At this time, no.” Update: Corporate says Conners allegations are “”
Watch hordes of TV journalists compare the AP & IRS scandals to Watergate.
Group tied to white nationalism enters immigration fray. Not what reform opponents needed after Heritage flap.