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What We’re Reading This Week, November 16-20

Here’s a selection of articles the Federal Relations team is reading this week.

Next Steps? – The Senate is having some issues moving forward with the Obamacare repeal. Read more at The Hill. 

Rolling Tide Lifts All Boats – University of Alabama has been a football powerhouse since the mid 1960s. First under legendary coach Bear Bryant and now under Coach Nick Sabin, the Crimson Tide football team earns nearly $95 million per year and is one of the best recruiting tools the university has for sports and academics. While the athletic department makes a tidy sum, the ancillary products and endorsement deals are truly where the revenue lies for the university, Tuscaloosa, and the state. Read more at The New York Times.  

Mismatches – NCAA head Mark Emmert caution colleges and universities about recruiting student athletes that were academic “mismatches”. Read more at USA Today. 

Clinton-type Money – Over the last 40 years in politics, Bill and Hillary Clinton have established a monumental network of donors and supporters in both high-monied and small individual donations. They’ve raised something to the tune of $3 billion. They have cultivated a vast network through charm, intellect, and personal interaction. How did they do it and who are these supporters? Read more in The Washington Post. 

Hoppe To It – Speaker Ryan’s new chief of staff, David Hoppe, is an old political hand, who eschews interviews, keeps his calm and agrees to disagree. His current job is helping herd cats — something he’s already experienced at working for Senator Trent Lott.  Read more in the Washington Post. 

Peace for Paris (jean jullien)

Roe v. Wade v. Texas – The Supreme Court has agreed to hear the latest challenge to abortion access. Two years ago, Texas passed legislation that severely limited who and where abortions could be provided. It catapulted Texas State Senator Wendy Davis, and her tennis shoes, in to the national spotlight. Now, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case challenging the restrictions. Read more from The Economist.

Geography Lesson – Presidential candidate Ben Carson’s campaign recently posted a map of all the states refusing to take in Syrian refugees. Unfortunately, he put some states in the wrong place. Read more at The Washington Post.

Nah… – Over a decade after the Attacks on 9/11, new information and correspondence has been declassified revealing the Bush Administration ignored detailed CIA warnings of an impending terrorist strike. Read more at Politico.

Missing Our Underestimation – Until the events of this week (Beirut, Paris, Egypt’s plan crash, and in March an attack in Yemen that killed 140) Western experts have routinely assumed ISIL efforts were successful in lone wolf attacks, and not as sophisticated at staging attacks like Al Quaeda. While we will learn a lot over the next weeks and months about the attacks, one immediate take away is that many in the West fundamentally misunderstood ISIL’s capabilities, behaviors and intentions. Read more at Politico.

Peace for Paris – The artist who created the much used and powerful Peace for Paris image, Jean Jullian, (see above) talks about creating the image minutes after hearing about the attacks in Paris. Read the story in Wired. 

Getting Here – How do refugees actually get into the United States? What is the actual process? Read about it at Vox. 

NY Times’s Table For Three series has a conversation with Gloria Steinem and the Notorious RBG.

What We’re Reading This Week, November 9-13

Happy Veterans Day Week! Here’s a selection of articles the Federal Relations team enjoyed this week.

First Gen – It’s a term that’s used often, “first generation” students, but who are these students and how are schools counting them? More at Inside Higher Education. 

Flying Fortress. (LOC)
Flying Fortress. (LOC)

Grounded – Speaker Paul Ryan has solicited a lot of information and has had a lot solicited from him as Speaker including a request from watchdog groups asking to end Members taking privately funded travel. Read more at Roll Call. 

POTUS? – When Paul Ryan agreed to run for Speaker, most understood this means that he’s put any presidential ambitions to rest because no Speaker of the House has been elected President except James Polk in 1844. Also it should be noted that, by the election, Polk had left the Speakership and was serving as Governor of Tennessee. So what’s Ryan’s long-term plan? Read more at The Hill.

Climate of Coal – Peabody coal, one of the nation’s largest coal companies, has been accused is misleading investors as to the impacts of climate change and the company’s bottom line. The allegation comes to light after a New York Attorney General’s investigation. Exxon Mobile is also being investigated for similar reasons. Read more at NPR.

Down On the Field & Out the Game – University of Missouri System President Tim Wolfe resigned and University of Missouri Columbia Chancellor Loftin Flowers agreed to step down on Monday after over a month of growing tensions with the Columbia student body. SB Nation covers what the Missouri football strike is all about. The final hit came from Wolfe’s blindside, when the Mizzou football team refused to play their next game in solidarity with the #concernedstudents1950 movement. Read how the football team cut the president at the Washington Post. Read the New York Times take.

Sweeping Effects – As the turmoil in Missouri keeps going, an associate professor offered his resignation, which was rejected, for holding class (and a test). The true outrage was his email to students saying that he wasn’t going to “give in to the bullies”. Students had questioned holding class because popular site YikYak had reports of shooters planning to kill black students. The individual who made the threats has been arrested (and was not in Columbia Missouri, where MU is located). Read more at NBC News. 

Can’t Take the Heat? – Current GOP front runner Dr. Ben Carson has begun pushing back against the significant scrutiny recently that comes with being the leading presidential candidate. Carson’s statements on the pyramids (they were used to store grain), his West Point full ride after a dinner with a general (he never applied so could never be offered such), or to the most recent dust up over if he stabbed someone (he apparently didn’t). Carson has charged that no other candidate has faced this much scrutiny and the Washington Post says challenge accepted. It goes through almost of the major political stories for both parties and goes back to the last presidential election. Read more at The Washington Post.   Side note, The Atlantic is tracking the bigger political gaffes happening this cycle at their Gaffe Track.

Senate on O-care – The Senate is preparing to take up a measure repealing Obamacare, and plans on sending the measure to the President’s desk (for an assured veto). Unfortunately, the Senate GOP conference is undecided on how far the measure should go. Read more at The Hil. 

Team Marco – Hill staff predict that Marco Rubio will be the Republican nomination for President. Read more at Roll Call. 

Google Doodle celebrated actress and scientist Hedy Lamarr’s 101st birthday this week with this doodle:

Ed Takes Aim at Accreditors

Today, Dept. of Education officials announced a series of actions centering on transparency in an effort to force accreditors to focus more on student outcomes and hold failing colleges accountable. For the most part, the accrediting agencies will not be required to change their practices. Instead, ED hopes to drive change by publishing and disseminating a wealth of information about accreditors and the colleges they oversee on a revamped department web page. One definite change accrediting agencies will have to makesubmitting decision letters – which the department will then publish online – when they put institutions on probation.

Read more at Politico. 

What We’re Reading This Week, November 2-6

It’s a balmy 70-something degrees in the nation’s capital…in November, but that hasn’t stopped the news cycle! Here’s a selection of articles Federal Relations is reading this week.

#Fail – Despite pouring millions of his vast personal fortune into politics, mega-donor Charles Koch said he and his brother David are “so far … largely failures at” buying up influence and changing the level of political rhetoric in the United States. He also compared himself to Martin Luther. See the interview at MSNBC here. Read about the interview at Politico here. 

Keep mum - the world has ears (LOC)
Keep mum – the world has ears (LOC)

Puff Puff Pass – Ohio was set to consider legalizing marijuana on Tuesday (which failed), but what’s truly making waves is how the ballot initiative is written. It would essentially allow only a handful of individuals (ten) to grow and sell pot in the state, effectively creating a monopoly. Read more at The Washington Post. Here are also the next states where marijuana will become an election issue. Read more at The Washington Post. 

Couch Caucus – About a third of Members of the House sleep in their congressional offices, the group has been informally dubbed “the Couch Caucus”, and one of those caucus members is new Speaker Paul Ryan, who has no intention of changing the arrangement. Read more at Roll Call. 

Va-cay – The House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy has released the 2016 schedule and the House be enjoying a very long vacation for half of July, all of August, and half of September. Looks like lots of campaigning will be happening. Read more at Politico.

Early Release – Six thousand prisoners could get out early due to retroactive changes in US mandatory sentencing for drug crimes. It’s the largest release in history, and it’s only the beginning. Ultimately, the federal government is planning on releasing only 40,000 individuals. Read more at Vox. 

Next In Line – First true fight new Speaker Paul Ryan will have to negotiate is who replaces him as chair on the House Ways and Means committee. Read more at Politico.

Comeback Kid? – Jeb Bush is sinking in the polls after a series of disastrous or not strong debates. Can he make a comeback? Read more at The Washington Post. 

Senate Passes Budget Around 3 am

The Senate cleared a bipartisan budget and debt limit accord early Friday morning which would send the legislation to the President’s desk. Roughly 72 hours after it was unveiled and buying roughly two years of relative budgetary stability after months of partisan sniping on spending, the Senate passed HR1314 shortly after 3 am. The House passed the measure Wednesday evening.

Just after  3 am, the upper chamber passed the deal by a vote of 64-35, roughly 90 minutes after voting to cut off debate on the legislation. Eighteen Republicans voted in favor of final passage, including Senate GOP Leadership, while 35 Republicans voted against the measure.  Forty-four Democrats and two independent senators who conference with Democrats backed the package. See the vote total here.

The budget deal would raise discretionary spending caps for defense and nondefense accounts by $80 billion above the sequester level for fiscal 2016 and fiscal 2017 and suspend the debt limit until March 15, 2017. The increased discretionary spending is offset with cuts to various entitlement programs and revenue raisers.

The President announced his support earlier this week.