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Table of Contents
WEINER'S PR STRATEGY FAILING
BOEHNER TO TRY FOR ANOTHER LIBYA RESOLUTION
O'DONNELL: FEC COMPLAINT DISMISSED
Congressional 
Climate Bill Tracking 
Keyhole Image H.R.658 - FAA Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.164 - Damaged Vehicle Information Act
Keyhole Image H.R.514 - FISA Sunsets Extension Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.1 - Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2011
Keyhole ImageH.R.4 - Small Business Paperwork Mandate Elimination Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.96 - Internet Freedom Act
Keyhole Image H.R.605 - Patients' Freedom to Choose Act
Keyhole Image S.244 - State Health Care Choice Act

Video Of The Day


Yemen on the brink of civil war

Yemen on the brink of civil war

 
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Greetings!  
Please enjoy today's issue of the Congressional Climate newsletter, brought to you by Lobbyit.com!
 Today's Hill Action: 

 

THE SENATE:

 

The Senate will meet at 10:30 a.m. for a pro forma session.

SENATE COMMITTEES:

 

No meetings scheduled for today.
 
THE HOUSE: 

 

The House will meet at 9:00 a.m. today.
  
HOUSE COMMITTEES:

House Energy & Commerce (9:00 a.m.): Energy & Power Subcommittee - Hearing to examine policy recommendations for H.R. 909 - A Roadmap to America's Energy Future. 2322 RHOB.
 
House Ways & Means (9:00 a.m.): Social Security Subcommittee - Hearing to examine the findings in the 2011 annual report of the board of trustees of the Social Security system. B-318 RHOB.
 
House Energy & Commerce (9:30 a.m.): Oversight & Investigations Subcommittee - Hearing to assess regulatory policy. 2123 RHOB.
 
House Financial Services (9:30 a.m.): Hearing to conduct oversight of the Housing and Urban Development HOME Program. 2128 RHOB.
 
House Foreign Affairs (9:30 a.m.): Africa, Global Health, & Human Rights Subcommittee - Hearing to examine prioritizing international religious freedom in U.S. foreign policy. 334 CHOB.
 
House Judiciary (9:30 a.m.): Hearing to conduct markup of H.J. Res. 1 - Proposing a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution of the United States, H.R. 1741 - The Secure Visas Act, H.R. 1932 - The Keep Our Communities Safe Act, and H.R. 966 - The Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act. 2141 RHOB.
 
House Natural Resources (9:30 a.m.): Energy & Mineral Resources Subcommittee - Hearing to examine H.R. 2011 - The National Strategic and Critical Minerals Policy Act, and H.R. 1314 - Resource Assessment of Rare Earths Act. 1324 LHOB.
 
House Oversight & Government Reform (9:30 a.m.): Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations, & Procurement Reform Subcommittee - Hearing to examine H.R. 735 - To preserve open competition and federal government neutrality towards the labor relations of federal government contractors on federal and federally funded construction projects, and project labor agreements. 2154 RHOB.

House Homeland Security (10:00 a.m.): Oversight, Investigations, & Management Subcommittee - Hearing to examine the Dept. of Homeland Security's efforts to counter threats from Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia. 311 CHOB.

Weiner's talkathon isn't saying much

 

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There are two camps of crisis management - and thus far, Anthony Weiner seems to be keeping his feet firmly planted outside both of them.

 

College public relations textbooks urge full transparency, getting everything out immediately and fully, while another school - embodied by a host of scandal-scarred pols over the years - urges secrecy, limited communications and never, ever voluntarily giving up information to the authorities.

 

Weiner has spent the past five days ricocheting between those two poles and wound up where pretty much no one would advise: a media blitz that raised more questions than it answered and failed to establish with "certitude" whether a photograph that appeared on Weiner's Twitter feed was of his own crotch.

 

Part of Weiner's mystifying performance, allies say, comes from the fact that he seems to be his own closest adviser. "It's never a good idea to be your own lawyer," said a pained Weiner friend.

 

Weiner's allies say the press-savvy former spokesman for New York Sen. Chuck Schumer has been masterminding his own defense, though he's in email and telephone touch with a wide circle of former aides and a smaller political team that shaped his 2005 bid for mayor of New York and had been expected to advise on a 2013 campaign, including consultants Jim Margolis and Tom Freedman and pollster Joel Benenson.

 

That go-it-alone approach has satisfied no one and left a general feeling of bewilderment among those watching Weiner try to argue that he was the victim of an Internet prank.

 

"If in fact it was just a hacking, then the performance is mystifying," said Eric Dezenhall, who heads a Washington crisis management firm.

 

Lanny Davis, a veteran of Clinton White House scandals who often advises clients to dump their bad news fast and in full, said Weiner should embrace that strategy. Not to do that is "simply to compound the crisis - to give it legs, to give it more energy," he said.

 

Weiner's predicament has already dealt a blow to his political prospects. Long seen as a glib, punchy and perhaps slightly adolescent spinoff of the heavyweight Schumer, he had acquired a level of public seriousness as a leading spokesman for the left. And his marriage last summer to glamorous, trusted Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin had the feel of the merger of the two great houses of Clinton and Schumer.

 

His apparent acknowledgement, like an embarrassed high schooler, that there may be pictures of his genitals floating around the social media has shredded that new grownup image.

 

"This just underscores for [New York's political class] that Anthony would never be a good mayor," said a senior aide to a member of New York's congressional delegation.

 

Weiner's PR strategy seemed ill-considered from the start. The tweet linking a lewd photo appeared Friday night, and Saturday morning Weiner emailed a flip response to a reporter's inquiry. Saturday, though, he and his aides realized that they had a serious problem and sought to confine the story to the conservative fringes of the Internet, dismissing it as a "hack" and communicating in curt statements.

 

Weiner issued more limited statements during the holiday weekend and, an adviser said, he and his aides believed he could move past it at a Tuesday news conference.

 

What the congressman didn't realize, two people close to him said, was that reporters - and their audiences - who hadn't spent the weekend covering the story and reckoning with his limited statements wouldn't be satisfied by his evasions. The news conference turned into a confrontation: Weiner called a CNN producer a "jackass" and left the impression he had something to hide. 

Soon after, he reversed course. If stonewalling wouldn't work, he would be the ubiquitous, media-embracing Weiner. He blitzed the cable networks, from Fox to NY1News, but he arrived without clear answers and did nothing to set the story to rest. 

Of course, the simplest explanation of the scenario is that he had, in fact, tried to send a picture of his genitals to a 21-year-old Washington state college student. Weiner has denied that in public and in private. Two people who spoke to him privately said he had suggested that, as one said, "he took or sent a photo or photos like this at some point - but in this case actually was hacked/set up, perhaps with a posting of one of his own photos or something very similar." 

"If that is the reality, there is no magic, good way to handle it," Dezenhall said. "You have what lawyers call a 'bad fact.'" 

Friends said Weiner may also be personally torn about how to proceed. Though he's a very public figure, he's also a very private person and, despite a reputation as a ladies' man, rarely shared details of his personal life with staff or reporters before his wedding last summer. His wife, meanwhile, is intensely private and a veteran keeper of Clinton secrets, an unquestionably loyal aide who has been in the room during countless confidential meetings. 

The one character in the Weiner drama who has followed the public relations textbook to the letter is Gennette Cordova, the student to whom the text message was directed. She issued a detailed statement on Sunday that outlined what she knew and didn't know and debunked a series of specific claims. 

Since then, she has limited her comments to occasional, specific Twitter messages. 

"I've denied every single interview request I've gotten, ... And that includes the 'Today' show! And I freaking love Matt Lauer :(," she wrote. 

Asked by POLITICO, via Twitter, about the source of her apparent sang-froid, in sharp contrast to the congressman's flailing, Cordova replied: "I think if I had something to hide I might be more freaked out. This really is a nightmare, though."

Boehner Pushes New Libya Resolution  

 

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Speaker John Boehner on Friday will introduce a resolution giving the Obama administration 14 days to provide Congress with a justification for involvement in the Libyan revolution, a bid by the GOP to make an end run around a more forceful Democratic demand for an end to U.S. operations.

 

The House will vote on the measure Friday as well.

 

Boehner outlined the resolution in a meeting with his members Thursday, Republicans said. The resolution would assert that the White House has not yet sought authorization for the war and Congress has not granted that authority. It would also reiterate opposition to sending in ground troops.

 

Currently, the U.S. is participating in a NATO-led mission by conducting air strikes on Libyan government and military positions, an operation that began as an attempt to prevent dictator Moammar Gadhafi from attacking his own citizens.

 

According to one source, Boehner pushed back against GOP support for a stronger resolution authored by Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio). That resolution would have required the U.S. to cease participating in the Libyan conflict in 15 days.

 

Boehner argued that it would be politically dangerous to essentially turn over the floor to Kucinich, this source said.

 

Republicans indicated Boehner's alternative had received a positive reception. Rep. Renee Ellmers said she thought the resolution was a good solution.

 

"It answers the questions a lot of us have. ... The Speaker has put together a good piece of legislation," the North Carolina Republican said.

 

Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia, agreed: "In the situation we find ourselves in now, I think it's appropriate."

 

The resolution appears to have sucked some of the momentum out of Kucinich's sails. When asked whether he thought Republicans may vote for both his and Boehner's bills, Chabot said, "I think there will be some, but it won't be a huge number."

 

Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.), a co-sponsor of Kucinich's bill, declined to say whether he would vote for it. "I'll have to talk to you about that later," he told reporters.

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Former U.S. Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell says the Federal Election Commission has dismissed a complaint filed against her during last year's campaign by the Delaware Republican Party.

 

The state GOP accused O'Donnell and the Tea Party Express of violating FEC rules that restrict coordination between candidates and outside political organizations.

 

The complaint alleged that the Tea Party Express solicited donors to contribute to O'Donnell and that O'Donnell and the group worked jointly on advertising, breaching federal rules.

 

In a post on her Twitter account Thursday, O'Donnell says the FEC had dismissed the complaint, which she described as frivolous and politically motivated. O'Donnell's campaign lawyer also says the complaint has been dismissed, though an FEC spokeswoman says she can't confirm it.

Until tomorrow,


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