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  • Congressman who said Snooki was more substantive than Obama likely to run for Senate

    Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA), one of the most conservative members in the House of Representatives, appears ready to announce his bid for the U.S. Senate from Georgia on Wednesday.

    Broun will make a statement at an Atlanta hotel tomorrow at 4:00 pm ET to announce his plans, according to a press release.

    Broun's wife recently told conservative activists that her husband will run, and GOP aides expect Wednesday to be the official announcement.

    Broun, who got a 96% rating from the conservative group Heritage Action, has often bucked the House GOP leadership. He voted against John Boehner for Speaker, supporting Tea Party favorite former Rep. Allen West (R-FL) instead.

    If nominated, Broun would be the candidate that would give the GOP establishment the most unease.

    Broun is so conservative that in 2010, he was one of three members of Congress to vote against the ban of selling animal crush pornography videos. Broun claimed that the government had no right to interfere.

    A doctor, Broun has offered multiple bills to try and take down the president's health-care law, and has voted against every single fiscal compromise that the GOP leadership and the president have agreed upon.

    Broun is also the only known member of Congress to incorporate "The Jersey Shore" reality show into a press release, calling Snooki more substantive than President Obama.

    "I don't know if we should be insulted or humored at the president's feeble attempts to incorporate Republican ideas into his latest health-care proposal," Brown said in March 2010. "Snooki, from the Jersey Shore, has more substance than President Obama's offer."

    There are several other Republicans considering a primary bid to replace Saxby Chambliss.

    For Democrats, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed declined a bid yesterday. Conservative Democratic Rep. John Barrow is another name others are pointing to as a possibility.

  • First Thoughts: Flooding the zone

    The White House tries to flood the zone with its legislative priorities… Hagel on track to win Senate confirmation… McCain and others oppose filibustering him -- a move which would have been unprecedented for a cabinet nominee… Cantor to deliver 1:00 pm ET speech to redefine his party and himself… And on drones and executive power: NBC’s Isikoff uncovers DOJ memo justifying drone killings of U.S. citizens believed to be operational leaders of al Qaeda.

    *** Flooding the zone: Exactly one week away from President Obama’s State of the Union address, the White House has spent the early days of the second term flooding the zone with its legislative agenda. Last week, the president delivered his big immigration speech in Las Vegas. Yesterday, he spoke about gun violence in Minnesota. Today, he’s meeting at the White House with progressive, labor, and business leaders to discuss immigration reform and the budget situation. What’s going on here: The Obama White House wants to overload Washington’s political circuits in an effort to see what it can get through Congress -- without letting Congress define what issues get addressed. After all, Republicans want to solely talk about the budget before the March budget showdown (see yesterday’s multiple coordinated responses by House Republicans on the White House’s announcement it would be late with its budget). Yet by flooding the zone, Team Obama -- with the bully pulpit and the State of the Union at its disposal -- wants to widen the political dialogue beyond that one issue. This “flooding the zone” concept is how the Obama White House operated in the first six months of the first term, and it’s where he got most of his legislative achievements. When the White House got bogged down on ONE issue (health care, debt ceiling, etc), officials determined they lost some of their political capital.

    Ben Garvin / Getty Images

    President Barack Obama speaks before a crowd of local leaders and law enforcement officials at the Minneapolis Police Department Special Operations Center on Feb. 4, 2013 in Minneapolis, Minn.

    *** Hagel on track to win Senate confirmation: Despite his rough Senate confirmation hearing last week, Chuck Hagel appears to be on his way toward becoming President Obama’s third defense secretary. Why? Because John McCain and other GOP senators say they won’t filibuster Hagel, meaning that all he needs is a simple of majority of U.S. senators to win confirmation (and there are 55 Democrats in the Senate). The New York Times: “Several Republican senators — notably John McCain — said Monday they would oppose a filibuster of former Senator Chuck Hagel’s confirmation as secretary of defense, moving the nominee much closer toward approval.” However, as one of us wrote yesterday, a filibuster against Hagel would have been unprecedented: No presidential cabinet nominee has ever been required to attain the 60 votes necessary to overcome a filibuster. Nine have lost simple up-or-down votes -- the last being John Tower’s 1989 nomination to be defense secretary amid accusations of womanizing and alcohol abuse. Twenty-one nominees have been withdrawn by presidents, most recently former Sen. Tom Daschle (taxes), who was Obama’s pick to head Health and Human Services in 2009, and Bernard Kerik (undocumented housekeeper) before that in 2004 under George W. Bush. But while confirmation for Hagel is in sight, the bigger question (as we asked yesterday) is whether Hagel has the credibility and stature to work with the GOP on issues that matter to the Pentagon.

    *** Cantor’s effort to redefine GOP and himself: At 1:00 pm ET, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor will deliver a speech to the American Enterprise Institute to begin branding his party -- and himself -- beyond the divisive budget debates. As National Journal previewed yesterday, Cantor “plans to ask Congress to require universities to warn students when their academic majors lack employment opportunities; to repeal the tax on medical devices, a provision of Obama’s health care overhaul; and to shift spending from political sciences to ‘hard’ sciences such as cancer research.” According to excerpts of his remarks, the GOP leader is expected to say: “Our solutions will be based on the conservative principles of self-reliance, faith in the individual, trust in the family, and accountability in government. Our goal – to ensure every American has a fair shot at earning their success and achieving their dreams.” More: “Government policy should aim to strike a balance between what is needed to advance the next generation, what we can afford, what is a federal responsibility and what is necessary to ensure our children are safe, healthy and able to reach their dreams.” As Politico points out, this is not the first time Cantor has tried to rebrand himself and the party.

    *** On drones and executive power: As NBC’s Michael Isikoff first reported last night, a confidential Justice Department memo “concludes that the U.S. government can order the killing of American citizens if they are believed to be ‘senior operational leaders’ of al-Qaida or ‘an associated force’ -- even if there is no intelligence indicating they are engaged in an active plot to attack the U.S.” Isikoff adds, “The 16-page memo, a copy of which was obtained by NBC News, provides new details about the legal reasoning behind one of the Obama administration’s most secretive and controversial polices: its dramatically increased use of drone strikes against al-Qaida suspects, including those aimed at American citizens, such as the  September 2011 strike in Yemen that killed alleged al-Qaida operatives Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan.” The publication of this memo will likely: 1) add fireworks to John Brennan’s confirmation hearing on Thursday to head the CIA, and 2) spark a public debate about this issue. There hasn’t been much of an outcry about this beyond the civil-liberties community, because the public wants to go after bad guys (like al-Awlaki). But the story does raise important questions: What are the checks on this power? How much faith do you put in executive branch in not abusing this? Expect these questions to come up at Brennan’s confirmation hearing. Congress has been surprisingly silent on this issue, very few members have demanded more transparency or oversight. Perhaps this memo will spark more Congressional interest.

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  • Programming notes

    *** Tuesday’s “Daily Rundown” line-up: NBC’s Michael Isikoff with more on his exclusive report about the Justice Dept. terror/drone memo… Breaking down the goals and knocks on Karl Rove’s new push with his point man, American Crossroads’ Steven Law, and one of his critics, Club for Growth’s Chris Chocola… Understanding the impact of a centrist power push in Israel and what it means for Mideast peace with Democratic consultant Mark Mellman… Plus The Grio’s Perry Bacon Jr., Democratic pollster Celinda Lake and GOP strategist John Feehery in the Gaggle.

    *** Tuesday’s “MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts” line-up: MSNBC’s MSNBC’s Thomas Roberts interviews Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) about Congress & Guns, NBC’s Michael Isikoff about the DOJ memo on targeting Americans and Minnesota Vikings Punter Chris Kluwe about gay rights and pro-sports.  Today’s Power Panel includes: USA Today’s Jackie Kucinich, Republican Strategist Chip Saltsman and Democratic Strategist Jamal Simmons.

    *** Tuesday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews Sen. Luis Guittierez (D-IL), San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza, the Boston Globe’s Michael Kranish, NBC’s Michael Isikoff, Actress and Author Julie Andrews and author Emma Walton Hamilton.

    *** Tuesday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviews Rep. Adam Schiff, Veronique Haller-Pozner (mother of Sandy Hook Victim), the Atlantic’s Molly Ball, and Zach Wahls, Eagle scout raised by two moms who spoke at the DNC.

  • Obama agenda: Back to immigration

    “It's an immigration day for President Obama,” USA Today writes. “The president meets separately Tuesday with labor and business leaders to push his immigration plan, one that includes a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants already in the United States.”

    “A confidential Justice Department memo concludes that the U.S. government can order the killing of American citizens if they are believed to be ‘senior operational leaders’ of al-Qaida or ‘an associated force’ -- even if there is no intelligence indicating they are engaged in an active plot to attack the U.S., NBC’s Michael Isikoff reports. “The 16-page memo, a copy of which was obtained by NBC News, provides new details about the legal reasoning behind one of the Obama administration’s most secretive and controversial polices: its dramatically increased use of drone strikes against al-Qaida suspects, including those aimed at American citizens, such as the  September 2011 strike in Yemen that killed alleged al-Qaida operatives Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan. Both were U.S. citizens who had never been indicted by the U.S. government nor charged with any crimes. The secrecy surrounding such strikes is fast emerging as a central issue in this week’s hearing of White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, a key architect of the drone campaign, to be CIA director.”

    A filibuster of President Obama’s Defense Secretary nominee Chuck Hagel is unlikely now that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has come out against one.  “I just do not believe a filibuster is appropriate, and I would oppose such a move,” he told Politico, adding, “I will try to make that argument to my colleagues.”

    Later, Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) joined McCain and Roy Blunt (R-MO) in opposing one. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, however, over the weekend left open the possibility of a filibuster. If he were to go through with one, it would be historic.

    As one of us wrote yesterday, no presidential cabinet nominee in history has been required to attain the 60 votes necessary to overcome a filibuster. Nine have been voted down, however, but not since John Tower’s nomination for Defense in 1989 amid accusations of womanizing and alcohol abuse. Twenty-one nominees have been withdrawn by presidents, most recently former Sen. Tom Daschle (taxes), who was President Obama’s pick to head Health and Human Services in 2009, and Bernard Kerik (undocumented housekeeper) before that in 2004 under George W. Bush.

    Reuters goes to coal country. One coal exec sees the industry going away by 2035. "There are no coal-fired plants being built. Mr. Obama took care of that. I think we're totally eliminated by 2035," said Robert Murray, chief executive of Murray Energy Corp., who also raises money for the GOP. Murray blames Obama, who ironically was known as a “liquid coal” senator when her represented Illinois, for cracking down on emissions from coal-fired plants and promoting wind and solar.

    More: Murray, who helped raise money for Mitt Romney “can be affable one moment and erupt with fury the next over what he called President Barack Obama's attempt to shut down the coal industry; the president's failure to understand business; his pandering to environmental radicals; and his promoting the ‘hoax’ of global warming. The president, he says, is ‘destroying America.’”

    Joe Biden’s meeting with the British prime minister today. 

  • Congress: Menendez dismisses 'smears'

    “Sen. Robert Menendez said Monday that allegations that he engaged with prostitutes in the Dominican Republic are false ‘smears,’” AP writes. “He said he has done nothing wrong and that allegations otherwise are ‘totally unsubstantiated.’”

    He said, “It’s amazing to me that anonymous, nameless, faceless individuals on a website can drive that type of story into the mainstream. But that’s what they've done successfully. Now nobody can find them, no one ever met them, no one can talk to them, but that’s where we’re at. The bottom line is all of those smears are absolutely false.”

    House Majority Leader Eric “Cantor plans to introduce his vision of America in a Tuesday speech at the conservative American Enterprise Institute,” Politico notes. “It includes granting more visas for highly educated workers, eliminating medical-device taxes and simplifying tax filings. His aides concede that all he’s doing is ‘taking policies that have been on the shelf for a while, or back burner, and elevating them.’ He’s not completely abandoning Republicans’ core focus on slashing spending, just pairing it with other more palatable talk. Call this Cantor 4.0 — just the latest twist in the majority leader’s attempt to hit on a winning conservative agenda at a time when Republicans are trying to regain their footing in the midst of a political pummeling at the ballot box and fiscal fights that haven’t worked to their advantage.

    This isn’t Cantor’s first crack at repackaging Republicanism. Or second. Or third.”

    There will be a House Republican-led hearing on immigration today. House Republicans are very slow to embrace immigration reform and are not endorsing the Senate plan right away.

    The New York Times has more on the hearing: “The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Representative Robert W. Goodlatte of Virginia, said on Monday that a series of hearings he will schedule in the coming months would examine different pieces of a possible overhaul of the immigration system, including proposals for a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants in the country.”

    “Republicans in Congress are much better armed than their Democratic counterparts — a fact that helps explain the deep partisan divide as Congress gears up for its first major votes on gun control in a decade. One hundred nineteen Republicans and 46 Democrats declared themselves as gun owners in a USA TODAY survey of lawmakers.”

  • More: Conservatives hit back

    Beth Reinhard: “By picking a fight so publicly in what former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin famously decried as the ‘lamestream media,’ the [American Crossroads] super PAC has royally antagonized the very conservative grassroots it is hoping to tame. The backlash on Monday was swift. Freedom Works President Matt Kibbe called the super PAC’s plans ‘Orwellian.’ ForAmerica Chairman L. Brent Bozell III declared, ‘The days of conservatives listening to the moderate GOP establishment are over.’ Tea Party Express called the Conservative Victory Project ‘a big mistake that will lead to neither conservatives, nor victories.’”

    “The Arkansas House voted Monday to ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy with no exceptions for rape or incest, sending the proposal to a state Senate that approved more stringent restrictions last week,” the AP writes. “The House also voted to block insurers from covering abortions if they participate in the online marketplace created under the federal health care overhaul.”

    “Hillary Clinton has found her post-State Department home on the World Wide Web,” Politico notes. “HillaryClintonOffice.com is bare-bones so-far, sporting only a picture of the former Secretary of State and a contact form. According to registration data, the site was created Jan. 31, and was last edited Sunday. The URL was registered through GoDaddy.com.”

    “Former Boy Scout leaders and activists on Monday delivered a petition with 1.4 million signatures to the Irving, Texas, headquarters of the Boy Scouts of America, urging the organization to end its ban on gay members and leaders,” USA Today writes. “Scouting executives said they were considering dropping the national ban during a three-day meeting that began Monday. A decision, if there is one, is likely Wednesday, the organization said.”

    Said Texas Gov. Rick Perry, an outspoken conservative former Scout: "I think most people see absolutely no reason to change the position, and neither do I.” Rick Santorum yesterday said there was a “war” on the Scouts.

    GEORGIA: “Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed says he won't be jumping into next year's race for the U.S. Senate in Georgia,” USA Today writes. “‘I'm just loving being mayor. I'm focused on being mayor,’ Reed said Monday on MSNBC. ‘I'm going to keep being mayor.’ Reed mentioned two fellow Democrats who would be "terrific" candidates: Rep. John Barrow, a five term congressman who has long been a GOP target, and Peter Aman, Atlanta's former chief operating officer.”

    IOWA: Steve King leads the GOP field for Senate in a new poll.

    MAINE: Gov. Paul LePage (R)’s “greatest fear”: newspapers.

    MASSACHUSETTS: “Three more high-profile Republicans announced in rapid succession Monday that they will not be candidates in the special US Senate election Monday, leaving the GOP with the prospect of fielding a relative unknown in what the party had hoped would be a pitched battle for John F. Kerry’s former seat,” the Boston Globe writes, adding, “In fast moving developments since Brown announced Friday that he would not run, several prominent GOP personalities — including former governor William F. Weld, former lieutenant governor Kerry Healey, former Senate minority leader Richard Tisei, and Mitt Romney’s son Tagg — announced they would not run in the special election.”

    More: “Now, the only Republican openly acknowledging interest in the seat is Gabriel E. Gomez, a venture capitalist who has been quietly moving around party leadership circles in recent weeks telling GOP movers and shakers he is seriously thinking of running. Gomez, a former Navy SEAL and fighter pilot, is scheduled to meet in Washington, D.C., Tuesday with officials from the National Republican Senatorial Committee. Gomez will be accompanied to the meeting by Ron Kaufman, the state party’s national committeeman, who has been involved in the GOP’s scramble to find a credible candidate.”

    State Rep. Dan Winslow might announce he’s getting in today.

    Andy Card might run for the seat in 2014.

    NEW JERSEY: Gov. Chris Christie (R) was on Letterman. After chomping on a jelly donut, he declared, "I'm basically the healthiest fat guy you've ever seen in your life."

    Frank Lautenberg (D) pulled in just $11,000 in the fourth quarter of 2012, Roll Call reports.

    OHIO: “Conservative groups wanted to stop the march of Obamacare expansion at ground zero: the states,” Politico notes. “But one of their best hopes just caved. John Kasich, the fiercely conservative governor of Ohio, announced Monday that he’s going to expand Medicaid dramatically using federal money — a 180-degree turn from what conservative groups swore their allies in governors’ mansions would do when the Supreme Court gave them an out last year.”

  • Justice Department memo reveals legal case for drone strikes on Americans

    A secretive memo from the Justice Department, provided to NBC News, provides new information about the legal reasoning behind one of the Obama administration's controversial policies. Now, John Brennan, Obama's nominee for CIA director, is expected to face tough questions about drone strikes on Thursday when he appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    A confidential Justice Department memo concludes that the U.S. government can order the killing of American citizens if they are believed to be “senior operational leaders” of al-Qaida or “an associated force” -- even if there is no intelligence indicating they are engaged in an active plot to attack the U.S.

    The 16-page memo, a copy of which was obtained by NBC News, provides new details about the legal reasoning behind one of the Obama administration’s most secretive and controversial polices: its dramatically increased use of drone strikes against al-Qaida suspects abroad, including those aimed at American citizens, such as the  September 2011 strike in Yemen that killed alleged al-Qaida operatives Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan. Both were U.S. citizens who had never been indicted by the U.S. government nor charged with any crimes.  

    The secrecy surrounding such strikes is fast emerging as a central issue in this week’s hearing of White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, a key architect of the drone campaign, to be CIA director.  Brennan was the first administration official to publicly acknowledge drone strikes in a speech last year, calling them “consistent with the inherent right of self-defense.” In a separate talk at the Northwestern University Law School in March, Attorney General Eric Holder specifically endorsed the constitutionality of targeted killings of Americans, saying they could be justified if government officials determine the target poses  “an imminent threat of violent attack.”


    But the confidential Justice Department “white paper” introduces a more expansive definition of self-defense or imminent attack than described  by Brennan or Holder in their public speeches.  It refers, for example, to what it calls a “broader concept of imminence” than actual intelligence about any ongoing plot against the U.S. homeland.    

    Michael Isikoff, national investigative correspondent for NBC News, talks with Rachel Maddow about a newly obtained, confidential Department of Justice white paper that hints at the details of a secret White House memo that explains the legal justifications for targeted drone strikes that kill Americans without trial in the name of national security.

    “The condition that an operational  leader present an ‘imminent’ threat of violent attack against the United States does not require the United States to have clear evidence that a specific attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place in the immediate future,” the memo states.

    Read the entire 'white paper' on drone strikes on Americans

    Instead, it says,  an “informed, high-level” official of the U.S. government may determine that the targeted American  has been “recently” involved in “activities” posing a threat of a violent attack and “there is  no evidence suggesting that he has renounced or abandoned such activities.” The memo does not define “recently” or “activities.” 

    As in Holder’s speech, the confidential memo lays out a three-part test that would make targeted killings of American lawful:  In addition to the suspect being an imminent threat, capture of the target must be “infeasible, and the strike must be conducted according to “law of war principles.” But the memo elaborates on some of these factors in ways that go beyond what the attorney general said publicly. For example, it states that U.S. officials may consider whether an attempted capture of a suspect  would pose an “undue risk” to U.S. personnel involved in such an operation. If so, U.S. officials could determine that the capture operation of the targeted American would not be feasible, making it lawful for the U.S. government to order a killing instead, the memo concludes.

    The undated memo is entitled “Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed Against a U.S. Citizen who is a Senior Operational Leader of Al Qa’ida or An Associated Force.”  It was provided to members of the Senate Intelligence and Judiciary committees in June by administration officials on the condition that it be kept confidential and  not discussed publicly.

    Although not an official legal memo, the white paper was represented by administration  officials as a policy document that closely mirrors the arguments of classified memos on targeted killings by the Justice Department’s  Office of Legal Counsel, which provides authoritative legal advice to the president and all executive branch agencies. The administration has refused to turn over to Congress or release those memos publicly -- or even publicly confirm their existence. A source with access to the white paper, which is not classified, provided a copy to NBC News. 

    “This is a chilling document,” said Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director of the ACLU, which is suing to obtain administration memos about the targeted killing of Americans.  “Basically, it argues that the government has the right to carry out the extrajudicial killing of an American citizen. … It recognizes some limits on the authority it sets out, but the limits are elastic and vaguely defined, and it’s easy to see how they could be manipulated.”

    In particular, Jaffer said, the memo “redefines the word imminence in a way that deprives the word of its ordinary meaning.”  

    Khaled Abdullah / Reuters

    Tribesmen this week examine the rubble of a building in southeastern Yemen where American teenager Abdulrahmen al-Awlaki and six suspected al-Qaida militants were killed in a U.S. drone strike on Oct. 14, 2011. Al-Awlaki, 16, was the son of Anwar al-Awlaki, who died in a similar strike two weeks earlier.

    A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment on the white paper. The spokeswoman, Tracy Schmaler, instead pointed to public speeches by what she called a “parade” of administration officials, including Brennan, Holder, former State Department Legal Adviser Harold Koh and former Defense Department General Counsel Jeh Johnson that she said outlined the “legal framework” for such operations. 

    Pressure for turning over the Justice Department memos on targeted killings of Americans appears to be building on Capitol Hill amid signs that Brennan will be grilled on the subject at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday. 

    On Monday, a bipartisan group of 11 senators -- led by Democrat Ron Wyden of Oregon — wrote  a letter to President Barack Obama asking him to release all Justice Department memos on the subject. While accepting that “there will clearly be circumstances in which the president has the authority to use lethal force” against Americans who take up arms against the country,  it said, “It is vitally important ... for Congress and the American public to have a full understanding of how  the executive branch interprets the limits and boundaries of this authority.”

    Anticipating domestic boom, colleges rev up drone piloting programs

    The completeness of the administration’s public accounts of its legal arguments was also sharply criticized last month by U.S. Judge Colleen McMahon in response to a  lawsuit brought by the New York Times and the ACLU seeking access to the Justice Department memos on drone strikes targeting Americans under the Freedom of Information Act.  McMahon, describing herself as being caught in a “veritable Catch-22,”  said she was unable to order the release of the documents given “the thicket of laws and precedents that effectively allow the executive branch of our government to proclaim as perfectly lawful certain actions that seem on their face incompatible with our Constitution and laws while keeping the reasons for the conclusion a secret.”

    In her ruling, McMahon noted that administration officials “had engaged in public discussion of the legality of targeted killing, even of citizens.” But, she wrote, they have done so “in cryptic and imprecise ways, generally without citing … any statute or court decision that justifies its conclusions.”

    In one passage in Holder’s speech at Northwestern in March,  he alluded – without spelling out—that there might be circumstances where the president might order attacks against American citizens without specific knowledge of when or where an attack against the U.S. might take place.

    “The Constitution does not  require the president to delay action until some theoretical end-stage of planning, when the precise time, place and manner of an attack become clear,”  he said.

    But his speech did not contain the additional language in the white paper suggesting that no active intelligence about a specific attack is needed to justify a targeted strike. Similarly, Holder said in his speech that targeted killings of Americans can be justified  if “capture is not feasible.” But he did not include language in the white paper saying that an operation might not be feasible “if it could not be physically effectuated during the relevant window of opportunity or if the relevant country (where the target is located) were to decline to consent to a capture operation.” The speech also made no reference to the risk that might be posed to U.S. forces seeking to capture a target, as was  mentioned in the white paper. 

    The white paper also includes a more extensive discussion of why targeted strikes against Americans does not violate constitutional protections afforded American citizens as well as   a U.S. law that criminalizes the killing of U.S. nationals overseas.

    It  also discusses why such targeted killings would not be a war crime or violate a U.S. executive order banning assassinations.

     “A lawful killing in self-defense is not an assassination,” the white paper reads. “In the Department’s view, a lethal operation conducted against a U.S. citizen whose conduct poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States would be a legitimate act of national self-defense that would not violate the assassination ban. Similarly,  the use of lethal force, consistent with the laws of war, against an individual who is a legitimate military target would be lawful and would not violate the assassination ban.”

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  • Obama on guns: 'We're not going to wait until the next Newtown'

    President Obama was in Minneapolis- a city once known for a double digit murder rate - to promote his plan on curbing gun violence.  He asked supporters to call on Congress to act. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

     

    Declaring “we're not going to wait until the next Newtown,” President Barack Obama appealed directly to the American public on Monday to pressure reluctant lawmakers in Congress to move forward with gun control legislation.

    Obama flew to Minneapolis, Minn., to urge constituents to contact their representatives and press for a package of new gun laws, including a ban on assault weapons and high capacity magazines, universal background checks for gun buyers and new rules targeting gun traffickers.

    “We don’t have to agree on everything to agree it’s time to do something,” Obama said, standing in front of a group of uniformed law enforcement officers.

    Obama’s campaign-like strategy is designed to maintain a sense of urgency for gun control measures in the wake of the elementary school shootings in Newtown, Conn., that killed 20 elementary school children and 6 adults.

    Recommended: Kerry: 'I have big heels to fill'

    But the president conceded Monday that his plans already face steep hurdles in Congress.

    "Changing the status quo is never easy," Obama said. "This will be no exception.”

    Obama’s remarks in Minneapolis reflected the political realities on Capitol Hill, where Democratic leadership aides privately say an assault weapons ban has little chance of passing. The fight will instead center on universal background checks and, some Democrats hope, high capacity magazines.

    On Monday, Obama labeled universal background checks as “commonsense” and “smart” reforms that would earn bipartisan support.

    “There's no reason why we shouldn't be able to get that done,” he said.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks about his gun violence proposals, Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in Minneapolis, where he outlined his plan before law enforcement personnel.

    There’s some evidence of that: While the National Rifle Association says it opposes universal background checks, Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma has been working with New York Sen. Chuck Schumer and other Democrats to craft background check legislation.

    For the politically difficult elements of his proposals – the bans on weapons and magazines – Obama set a more modest goal: “That deserves a vote in Congress,” he said.

    That’s about the extent of what Senate Democratic aides say they can muster. Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who earned a “B” grade from the National Rifle Association, said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” that he plans to allow the Senate Judiciary Committee to start writing a gun bill. If it doesn’t initially include the ban, senators could try to add it later in the process, as an amendment on the Senate floor.

    Reid has no plans to introduce his own gun bill, a senior Democratic aide said Monday, instead leaving that process to the Judiciary Committee, led by Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. Still, aides acknowledged, including a gun ban in the overall package could prevent other, more popular gun regulations from passing Congress.

    Democratic aides say Leahy hasn’t yet decided exactly what he’ll include in the bill, though he’s introduced a measure that would crack down on people who illegally buy guns to give or sell to others. Before the committee starts writing a bill, planned for later in February, there will be at least two more hearings – one this week in the Constitution Subcommittee and another full committee hearing after that.

    Congress held its first hearings on gun control late last month, where National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre clashed with Democratic senators and emerged in opposition to universal background checks.

    Obama referred to lobbyists like LaPierre in his remarks, though he didn’t mention the longtime gun advocate by name. He urged Americans to tell Congress if he didn’t speak for them.

    “If we've got lobbyists in Washington claiming to speak for gun owners saying something different, we've got to go to the source,” Obama said. “We cannot allow those filters to get in the way of common sense… keep the pressure on your member of Congress to do the right thing.”

     

    Speaking at the Minneapolis Police Department's Special Operations Center in Minneapolis, President Obama, says, "We don't have to agree on everything to agree it's time to do something." Watch his entire speech.

     

  • Hagel filibuster would be historic

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is threatening to filibuster Chuck Hagel’s nomination to become Defense Secretary.

    If he goes through with it, a move unclear to have enough Republican support to be successful, it would be historic. No cabinet-level nominee has been rejected because of a filibuster, and only two have been required to attain the 60 votes necessary to overcome a filibuster -- Dirk Kempthorne, President George W. Bush's nominee for Interior Secretary in 2006 and C. William Verity, Ronald Reagan's choice for Commerce Secretary. Both were easily overcame the filibuster, 85-8.

    “It’s unclear yet,” McConnell told reporters in Kentucky when asked if his party would attempt a filibuster, forcing Hagel to need 60 votes for nomination. Currently, Democrats control the chamber with 55 seats.

    “Sen. Hagel did not do a very good job before the Armed Services Committee this week. I think the opposition to him is intensifying. Whether that means he will end up having to achieve 60 votes or 51 is not clear yet.”

    Cloture, the vote to end debate and overcome a filibuster, was withdrawn in the case of President's Obama's pick to be Labor secretary, Hilda Solis, as well as President George W. Bush's nominee to be EPA administrator Michael Leavitt. It was also "vitiated" for Rob Portman to become U.S. Trade represenative under Bush, according to the Congressional Research Service.

    Plenty of others have been thwarted and one was even voted down since 1975 when the filibuster, requiring 60 votes, was introduced, according to lists provided by Don Ritchie, the Senate historian. That was George H.W. Bush’s Defense Secretary nominee John Tower, a former senator from Texas, who was accused of womanizing (he was married twice) and drinking to the point of alcoholism (he admitted he “drank to excess,” but, “I wouldn’t say I had a problem.”).

    Before the Senate vote on his nomination, Tower even went on TV vowing not to drink as Defense Secretary or he would resign.

    “Let me state that I have never been an alcoholic or dependent on alcohol,” Tower said in a statement distributed to the press and signed by his doctor. “I hearby swear and undertake that if confirmed, during the course of my tenure as secretary of defense, I will not consume beverage alcohol of any type or form, including wine, beer or spirits of any kind. I think I’d be obliged to resign if I broke the pledge. I’ve never broken a pledge in my life.”

    In the end, Tower’s nomination was defeated 53-47. Ironically, the men leading the charge for and against Tower -- former Sens. John Warner (R-VA) and Sam Nunn (D-GA), respectively -- flanked Hagel at his confirmation hearing to urge his confirmation.

    “There have been cabinet nominees rejected by the Senate, where there was a vote taken and gone down to defeat,” Ritchie said. “Some were withdrawn by the president because of opposition.”

    Other, non-cabinet-level nominees were not able to overcome a filibuster, including John Bolton to be ambassador to the United Nations, a position President Obama now considers "cabinet-level."

    There have been nine people nominated for a cabinet post who were voted on and formally rejected by the U.S. Senate, according to the Senate Historical Office. Tower’s, however, was the first since 1959 when Dwight Eisenhower’s  pick to be Commerce secretary, Lewis Strauss, failed 49-46.

    Prior to that, just one other person was rejected in the 20th Century. In fact, Charles B. Warren, Calvin Coolidge’s nominee to head the Justice Department has the distinction of being the only person in history rejected twice, first by a 41-39 vote. Coolidge then renominated him two days later only to see Warren rejected again by an even wider 46-39 margin just four days after being renominated.

    The other six rejected nominees were all in the 19th Century.

    Some nominees have been withdrawn by presidents. There have been 21 nominees withdrawn by presidents, most recently former Sen. Tom Daschle, who was President Obama’s pick to head Health and Human Services in 2009; Bernard Kerik, George W. Bush’s nominee for Homeland Security in 2004; and Linda Chavez, Labor, under Bush in 2001.

    President Bill Clinton withdrew three nominees -- for attorney general, director of the CIA, and Veterans Affairs.

    Prior to that, a nominee hadn’t been withdrawn since Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration in 1969.

    Whether Republicans would have the votes to successfully filibuster Hagel and prevent his confirmation is an open question, however.

    So far, every Democrat, plus two Republicans (Thad Cochran of Mississippi and Mike Johanns of Nebraska) seem likely to vote for Hagel, giving him 57 votes.

    Plus, so far, Republicans Roy Blunt of Missouri and John McCain of Arizona have said they oppose Hagel, but would not support a filibuster to block an up-or-down vote on his confirmation.

    McCain had one of the sharpest exchanges of Hagel’s confirmation hearing last week before the Armed Services Committee over the surge in Iraq. (Hagel and McCain, both Vietnam veterans, had been friends before Hagel opposed the surge proposed by McCain.)

    Despite that exchange, McCain told Politico Monday, “I just do not believe a filibuster is appropriate, and I would oppose such a move. … I will try to make that argument to my colleagues.”

    CORRECTION: An earlier version of this post incorrectly stated, based on information from the Senate Historian's Office, that no cabinet-level nominee had been formally filibustered. There were two prior cases, however, in which cloture was invoked and there was a vote.

  • Kerry: 'I have big heels to fill'

    On his first day as Secretary of State, John Kerry joked about being a man in what’s been a woman’s agency for nearly a decade.

    "Here's the big question before the country and the world and the State Department after the last eight years: can a man actually run the State Department?” Kerry told a large and enthusiastic crowd of Foreign Service Officers and staff at Foggy Bottom. “As the saying goes, ‘I have big heels to fill’.”

    Of course, Kerry was talking about replacing Hillary Clinton (D) and Condoleezza Rice (R) before that in the Bush administration, but going slightly further back, there hasn’t been a white male to head State in 16 years, since Warren Christopher under Clinton.

    Establishing his "bona fides" with the diplomats, he waved his first diplomatic passport: given him when he was a 12-year-old boy traveling to Berlin with his father and family for their assignment at the post-war U.S. embassy. 

    Speaking Monday, incoming Secretary of State John Kerry asked, jokingly, "Can a man actually run the State Department?" NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    He even told a story about using it to ride his bike into East Berlin on the wrong side of the wall, saying he got a tongue-lashing later from his father, who told him he could have become an international incident. His passport was lifted, and he was grounded.

    The State Department has been besieged by bad news in recent months – from the killing of U.S. Amb. Chris Stevens and three other Americans at a consulate in Benghazi, Libya, to the suicide bombing in front of the U.S. embassy in Ankara, Turkey.

    “So I pledge to you: I will not let their patriotism and their bravery be obscured by politics, No. 1,” he said of those who died in Benghazi. “No. 2, I guarantee you that beginning this morning, when I report for duty upstairs, everything I do will be focused on the security and safety of our people."

    Kerry ended on an idealistic note.

    “What other job can you have where you get up every day and advance the cause of nation and also keep faith with the ideals of your country on which it is founded, and most critically meet our obligations to our fellow travelers on this planet?” he said. “That's as good as it gets, and I'm proud to be part of it with you. So now let's get to work.”

    After Kerry’s speech, he placed calls to his counterparts in Britain, France, and Germany, three of America’s closest allies.

    After meeting with senior staff, Kerry met the Afghan National Institute of Music Group which was in the building today. Later, he will briefed on the implementation of the Accountability Review Board’s recommendations on how to prevent another attack like the one in Benghazi.

  • McCain compares Iranian leader to monkey; draws GOP charge of racism

    Matthias Schrader / AP

    Sen. John McCain

    Updated 12:52 pm ET. Always one to speak -- or Tweet -- his mind, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) Monday made a joke comparing Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to a monkey, something one Republican congressman charged was “racist.”

    “So Ahmadinejad wants to be first Iranian in space - wasn't he just there last week?” McCain said in a tweet that also linked to a story about Iran launching a monkey into space.

    Some didn’t take so kindly to the not-so-diplomatic quip, prompting McCain, 76, to respond: “Re: Iran space tweet - lighten up folks, can't everyone take a joke?”

    Seeing that, Michigan congressman Rep. Justin Amash, 32, shot back.

    “Maybe you should wisen up & not make racist jokes,” Amash tweeted.

    Not everyone on the right agreed with Amash. Conservative John Podhoretz, for example, Tweeted this: "How dare McCain say something demeaning & disparaging abt the foremost anti-Semite on the planet." And this: "So...it's defend-the-Jew-hater-from-the-war-hero day." 

    It’s not the first time McCain’s made a joke about Iran that landed him in some hot water. During his run for president in 2007, McCain sang about bombing the country.

    Asked by a GOP primary voter when the U.S. would send an “air-mail message to Tehran,” McCain said, “That old Beach Boys’ song, ‘Bomb Iran?’ Bomb, bomb, bomb—, anyway.”

    McCain’s response then as now? It’s just a joke -- "get a life.”

    “When veterans are together, veterans joke,” McCain said at the time. “And I was with veterans and we were joking. And if somebody can’t understand that, my answer is, ‘Please, get a life.’”

  • Ex-Mass. Gov. Weld won't run for Senate

    Former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld will not run for the Senate, the latest Republican to decline a bid for the Senate seat vacated by John Kerry.

    “While I am grateful for the kind expressions of support and encouragement which I have received, I will not be a candidate for United States Senator from Massachusetts in the special election this year,” Weld said in a statement released Monday.

    Weld -- who currently works for the M.L. Strategies in Boston, the government relations and consulting arm of the Mintz Levin law firm -- ran for the Senate in 1996 as the Republican nominee -- and lost to Kerry.

    Weld follows former Sen. Scott Brown (R) in declining a run. Brown bowed out of consideration Friday and is widely believed to be mulling a bid for governor next year.

    The Boston Herald reported that Mitt Romney's son Tagg is thinking about a run, but insiders don't believe that is likely.

    Most believe Brown's exit all but clears the path for the winner of the Democratic primary between Reps. Ed Markey and Stephen Lynch.

    Other potential Republicans talked about:

    - Former Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey
    - state Rep. Dan Winslow
    - former state Rep. Karyn Polito
    - FOX News contributor/talk show host Dr. Keith Ablow
    - Gabriel Gomez, ex-Navy SEAL

  • First Thoughts: GOP establishment strikes back

    GOP establishment strikes back… Rove, Crossroads to launch offshoot to counter conservative groups in Republican Senate primaries… Obama heads to Minnesota to push for universal background checks… Panetta, Dempsey defend the Defense secretary nominee… Obama, Reid argue for more revenue… Brown decides against Senate bid… And Bolling on Cuccinelli: “It’s like he’s written off trying to reach mainstream voters.”

    *** GOP establishment strikes back: This year was always going to be about two big political stories -- President Obama’s ability to work with congressional Republicans (on the budget, immigration), and the Republican Party’s effort to define itself after its shellacking in 2012. And today we examine that second story. The Sunday New York Times reported that the Karl Rove-backed American Crossroads organization is creating an offshoot, called the Conservative Victory Project, to counter the influence of groups like Club for Growth and the Senate Conservatives Fund. Its mission: to spend money in GOP primaries to make sure that candidates like Todd Akin, Richard Mourdock, Sharron Angle, and Christine O’Donnell don’t become the nominees for key Senate contests. “In effect, the establishment is taking steps to fight back against Tea Party groups and other conservative organizations that have wielded significant influence in backing candidates who ultimately lost seats to Democrats in the general election,” the Times said, adding that the Conservative Victory Project’s first effort could be in Iowa, where conservative Rep. Steve King is mulling a Senate bid.

    J. Scott Applewhite / AP

    Karl Rove walks across the floor before the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2012.

    *** Republicans, let’s get ready to … rumble: Rove and Crossroads promised that they would launch this kind of effort, after losing winnable Senate races in Missouri and Indiana last year, as well as in Colorado, Delaware and Nevada in 2010. Yet this establishment effort to nominate better candidates is probably going to make things more painful in the short term, not less. First, these conservative groups are already firing back. “Both the Club for Growth and the Senate Conservatives Fund … mocked the new initiative as yet another hapless establishment-side attempt to muzzle the GOP base,” Politico writes. “Club for Growth spokesman Barney Keller essentially responded by pointing to the scoreboard in recent primaries in which conservative insurgents have prevailed and emerged as influential GOP leaders. ‘They are welcome to support the likes of Arlen Specter, Charlie Crist and David Dewhurst,’ Keller said of the new Crossroads group.” Second, the establishment-backed candidates haven’t always succeeded in general elections, either. After all, folks like Denny Rehberg in Montana and Rick Berg in North Dakota also lost winnable races last year. And third, how much credibility does Crossroads have after its results last year? Bottom line: This effort was bound to happen, but this is going to be ugly -- as both the populist and establishment wings try to become, well, the NEW establishment. The question is whether these more public primary fights help redefine the party in time for 2016.

    *** Obama heads to Minnesota: Turning back to that first story of 2013 -- Obama’s ability to work with congressional Republicans -- the president today travels to Minneapolis, MN, where he will deliver remarks on gun violence at 2:30 pm ET. And today’s visit is mostly about pushing for the measure that seems to have the most momentum behind it: universal background checks. The AP: “The White House picked Minneapolis as the backdrop for Obama's remarks in part because of recent steps the city has taken to tackle gun violence, including a push for stricter background checks.” Indeed, background checks are something that GOP Sen. Roy Blunt said he could back in an interview last week on MSNBC’s “Daily Rundown.” And on ABC yesterday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a gun-rights supporter, said: “I think that everyone acknowledges we should do something with background checks.”

    *** Defending the Defense nominee: In their interviews on “Meet the Press,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Joint Chiefs Chairman Martin Dempsey defended Chuck Hagel’s performance at his confirmation hearing last week. Said Panetta: “What disappointed me is that [Republican questioners] talked a lot about past quotes, but what about what a secretary of defense is confronting today? What about the war in Afghanistan? What about the war on terrorism? What about the budget sequester?” Dempsey added about Hagel: “I think he's got great credentials. My personal contacts with him have been very positive. And if he's confirmed, I look forward to working with him.” But perhaps the most revealing comment on Hagel came from former Obama White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs during the “Meet” roundtable. “For anybody that watched it, was he seemed unimpressive and unprepared on the questions that quite frankly he knew was coming.” But Gibbs added that Tim Geithner, just days into his job as Treasury secretary, was panned by political observers -- but he later turned his reputation around. Gibbs’ reminder is a good one. Our question: If confirmed, will Hagel work as hard as Geithner did after the Treasury secretary’s own rocky start? Because the real issue for Hagel now isn’t getting confirmed; it’s whether he’ll have any political capital to work with Congress and the generals in a meaningful way. Defense secretaries can’t be seen as weak figures if they want to do big things like Obama wants Hagel to do.

    *** Obama, Reid argue for more revenue: In his interview before yesterday’s Super Bowl, President Obama argued that more tax revenues – as part of closing loopholes, etc. -- would have to be party of any budget deal with Republicans. “Can we close some loopholes and deductions that folks who are well connected and have a lot of accountants and lawyers can take advantage of so they end up paying lower rates than a bus driver or a cop?... “There’s no doubt we need additional revenue.” And during his interview on ABC, Reid made the same demand. “The American people are on our side. The American people don't believe in these austere things. We believe that the rich should contribute. We believe we should fill those tax loopholes, get rid of them, I should say. And that's where we need to go,” Reid said.

    *** Brown decides against Senate bid: Friday’s news that former Sen. Scott Brown (R) would pass on running for Massachusetts’ vacant Senate seat shouldn’t have been that surprising. To hold on to the seat in the Democratic-heavy state, Brown not only would have to win the upcoming special election -- which was no sure thing -- he’d then have to face voters again in 2014, when the seat expires. Still, Brown’s decision was a blow to the GOP, and it all but ensures that Democrats will retain the seat, with the winner of the Ed Markey (D) vs. Stephen Lynch (D) primary on April 30 likely becoming you’re next U.S. senator from Massachusetts. Then again, that’s what we all thought about Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat in 2009-2010.

    *** Bolling on Cuccinelli: “It’s like he’s written off trying to reach mainstream voters”: Finally, don’t miss Virginia Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling’s (R) comments on Ken Cuccinelli in an interview with the Richmond Times-Dispatch. “It’s like he’s written off trying to reach mainstream voters,” Bolling said. The article also notes how Bolling has broken with Gov. Bob McDonnell on key efforts – like transportation and expanding Medicaid under the health-care law. “There’s a certain liberating feeling to be able to say what you think without regard for the political implications,” he said. “It’s helped me find my voice.”

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  • Programming notes

    *** Monday’s “Daily Rundown” line-up: A Deep Dive with Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on the politics of Florida’s python hunt… More of Secretary Panetta’s departing thoughts on Washington, warfare and working together… Plus National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru, USA Today’s Susan Page and Democratic strategist Steve McMahon in the Gaggle.

    *** Monday’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports” line-up: NBC’s Andrea Mitchell interviews Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT), Ambassador Nicholas Burns, American Crossroads President & CEO Steven Law, the New York Times’ David Sanger, the Boston Globe’s Matt Viser and the Washington Post’s Jonathan Capehart.

    *** Monday’s “News Nation with Tamron Hall” line-up: MSNBC’s Tamron Hall interviews John Rosenthal from “Stop Handgun Violence”, Democratic strategist Margie Omero, Tim Murphy from Mother Jones, MSNBC Contributor Michael Smerconish, and former FBI Profiler Clint Van Zandt.

  • Obama agenda: Heading to Minnesota

    In his pre-Super Bowl interview, Obama blamed economic issues on Congress: "Washington cannot continually operate under a cloud of crisis."

    Obama also said more revenue is needed: "I don't think the issue right now is raising rates. There's no doubt we need additional revenue, coupled with smart, spending reductions in order to bring down our deficit. And we can do it in a gradual way so that it doesn't have a huge impact."

    “The fate of his gun proposals on Capitol Hill uncertain, President Barack Obama is seeking to rally support from the public and law enforcement community for his calls to ban assault weapons and install universal background checks for gun buyers,” AP writes. “Obama will pitch his proposals to stem gun violence Monday in Minnesota, a Democratic-leaning state where officials have been studying ways to reduce gun-related attacks and accidents for several years. His visit to the Minneapolis Police Department’s Special Operations Center will mark the first time Obama has campaigned on his controversial proposals outside of Washington.”

    And the White House released a photo of the president skeet shooting for the “skeet birthers,” as White House adviser David Plouffe called them. He added in another taunting tweet: “Day made. The skeet birthers are out in full force in response to POTUS pic. Makes for most excellent, delusional reading.”

    Speaking of… NRA spokesman Andrew Arulanandam: "One picture does not erase a lifetime of supporting every gun ban and every gun-control scheme imaginable.”

    The Minneapolis Star-Tribune, ahead of Obama’s trip: “The meeting spot, at 4115 Dupont Av. N., is just four blocks south of where 5-year-old Nizzel George was shot to death last summer in his home in a gang dispute. Last year, police seized an average of one gun every day in the Fourth Precinct.”

    USA Today: “This city has managed to shed the moniker of ‘Murder-apolis,’ the ugly nickname it was tagged with during the worst days of the crack and gang wars of the 1990s, when it had a homicide rate that rivaled New York City. The progress Minneapolis made reducing gun violence in the past few years has caught the attention of President Obama, who will visit the city Monday for his first trip outside the Beltway to tout his plan to overhaul the nation's gun laws.”

    But higher than that story in the Star-Tribune: “President Barack Obama said Sunday that gays should be allowed in the Boy Scouts and women should be allowed in military combat roles, weighing in on two storied American institutions facing proposals to end long-held exclusions.” Obama said: "My attitude is that gays and lesbians should have access and opportunity the same way everybody else does in every institution and walk of life. The Scouts are a great institution that are promoting young people and exposing them to opportunities and leadership that will serve people for the rest of their lives. And I think nobody should be barred from that."

    “President Barack Obama and his top advisers have declared that they’re done playing ‘the inside game’ in Washington, but one crucial Democratic constituency — his former colleagues in Congress — say the president shouldn’t deep-six a strategy that he only half-heartedly tried in his first term,” Politico writes. “As Obama prepares an aggressive public lobbying campaign for his ambitious second-term agenda, Democrats on Capitol Hill are bluntly warning him that he has to do more to engage them if he expects his congressional allies to take a series of politically tough votes.”

    “President Barack Obama may have to decide this year whether to use military force to fulfill his vow to prevent Iran from being able to build nuclear weapons, foreign policy experts say,” AP writes. “But America’s economic and military realities argue intensely against attacking the Islamic republic and for muddling through by, perhaps, further tightening sanctions that have cut deeply into Tehran’s economy.”

  • Congress: Boehner rebounds?

    “House Speaker John Boehner has shored up his political clout after a shaky month, persuading his Republican caucus to pick its fights with Democrats more strategically,” AP writes. “His impressive rebound, aided by face-the-facts confrontations with colleagues, helped the government avoid a potential default on its financial obligations — for three months, at least. It also reassured establishment Republicans who feared the House majority was becoming so unpredictable that it endangered the party. But the patched-up GOP solidarity and Boehner’s ability to pass bills without Democrats’ help are certain to be tested again.”

    Rich Wall Street donors aren’t happy with Republicans they supported. Republicans liaison to sort it all out is Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, vice chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Politico reports: “Portman’s been busy. He attended 12 meetings in just two days on a swing through New York in January. At one megadonor lunch, he presented a strategic plan for 2014.”

    Politico looks at Bob Menendez’s chances at political survival.

    Politico also calls Lindsey Graham’s dedication to immigration reform “a reflection of both Graham’s political strength and his party’s rapid evolution on immigration since its November licking among Latinos.”

  • More: Is Booker too thin-skinned?

    MASSACHUSETTS: The Boston Globe lists five Republicans who could run for the Senate seat now that Scott Brown has decided against a run – former Gov. Bill Weld, former Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey, state Rep. Dan Winslow, former state Rep. Karyn Polito, or FOX News contributor/talk show host Dr. Keith Ablow.

    The Boston Herald adds a name to the mix: “Tagg, you’re it for GOP Senate hopes.” From the story: “Tagg Romney is considering a run in the special Senate election now that Scott Brown has opted out.”

    It also includes: “Gabriel Gomez, a Navy SEAL who is set to meet with national Republicans to discuss a possible race this week.”

    NEW JERSEY: Maggie Haberman notes that Cory Booker, despite being the favorite to replace Frank Lautenberg, has shown signs of having being thin-skinned. She writes: “Booker initially agreed to be interviewed by Politico, rescheduled twice, then canceled 20 minutes after a reporter asked for comment on criticisms he had received from a prominent New Jersey Democrat about how he’s handled his campaign rollout.” Booker has complained about a New York Times report, said he was “annoyed” by questions from MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell, and sent a nasty response on Twitter to a reporter from the Newark Star-Ledger after a story Booker didn’t like. Booker has a lot of Twitter followers, who leapt to his defense, but as Democratic strategist Hank Sheinkopf says in the story, “Senate campaigns are not won over Twitter.”

    Democratic strategist Bob Shrum called Booker’s comments about Bain during the election “inexplicable,” noted: “He at times has not been exactly sure-footed.” And, he said, Booker “probably could have handled Frank Lautenberg a little better.”

    “Democrats have come out in force to support their default candidate for governor — state Sen. Barbara Buono,” AP writes, adding, “The 59-year-old progressive is the presumptive nominee to face Gov. Chris Christie in November. Buono says she'll fight for the middle-class and working poor forgotten during the Christie administration.” Of Christie’s popularity, the former lawyer said: “The state's high unemployment and property taxes existed ‘before the winds ever gusted or the ocean ever rose beyond our shores.’”

  • Panetta comes to Hagel's defense after nominee's difficult confirmation hearing

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta came to the aid of former Sen. Chuck Hagel, the man President Barack Obama nominated to succeed him, saying on NBC’s Meet the Press, “The political knives were out for Chuck Hagel” during his confirmation hearing last week.

    In nearly eight hours of testimony before the Senate Armed Service Committee on Thursday, Hagel spent much time revising and clarifying his previous remarks – including a spontaneous error at the hearing itself on whether United States policy toward Iran’s nuclear weapons program was one of containment.

    Panetta complained that the members of the committee spent too little time questioning Hagel about the current challenges the Defense Department faces, such as looming budget cuts, and spent too much time examining statements Hagel made in the past.

    Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta comments on Hagel's tough hearing last Thursday before the Senate and brings up some questions that should have been asked.

    Panetta insisted to NBC’s Chuck Todd that Hagel was “absolutely” prepared to take his place leading the Defense Department.

    Panetta’s backing of Hagel was seconded by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen Martin Dempsey, who said “in helping prepare him for his confirmation hearings, we had several opportunities to talk about strategy. And I found him well-prepared and very thoughtful about it.”

    As the Armed Services Committee prepares to hold a hearing Thursday on last September’s attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Panetta said he looked forward “to presenting what we know about what took place.” Congressional Republicans have questioned why there were no U.S. military aircraft or other forces in proximity to Benghazi that could have been dispatched to help defend Ambassador Chris Stevens and other US personnel. Stevens and three others were killed in the attack.

    Addressing the Defense Department’s airlift and intelligence-sharing role in assisting the ongoing French military intervention in the North African nation of Mali, Panetta said, “We are now working with France to make sure that al Qaida has no place to hide, even in North Africa.”

    Dempsey added that in North Africa “the regimes that you used to maintain control over that space that would, in fact, be part of the solution of keeping al Qaida and its affiliates at bay are no longer there.”

    Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta discuss the threat of Al Qaeda in North Africa and regional instability associated with recent change.

    The popular uprisings of the 2011 Arab Spring, Dempsey said, “stripped that away” leaving “ungoverned space” or “a period at which geography is less governed than it used to be.” That lack of control has allowed jihadist groups such as al Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) to flourish.

    Turning to Iran and its nuclear program, Panetta said, “The intelligence we have is they have not made the decision to proceed with the development of a nuclear weapon. The regime in Tehran is enriching uranium.  They continue to do that.”

    He added, “I can't tell you they are, in fact, pursuing a weapon, because that's not what intelligence says they're doing right now. But every indication is they want to continue to increase their nuclear capability. And that's a concern. And that's what we're asking them to stop doing.”

    Vice President Joe Biden said Saturday that the Obama administration is “would be prepared to meet bilaterally with the Iranian leadership,” but that talks would need to be serious, have an agreed-upon agenda, and not be merely an exercise.

    On the threat of spending cuts, known in Capitol language as “sequester,” scheduled to start on March 1 that are mandated by the Budget Control Act, Panetta said, “If Congress stands back and allows sequester to take place, I think it would really be a shameful and irresponsible act.”

    He added that the spending cuts this year – amounting to about 12 percent of Pentagon outlays apart from overseas operations – would “badly damage the readiness of the United States of America.”

    Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta tells NBC's Chuck Todd if a sequester is allowed to happen it will "badly damage" the readiness of the U.S.

    Panetta, who served as head of the Office of Management and Budget under President Clinton and as chairman of the House Budget Committee in the late 1980s, said, “As somebody who's worked with budgets throughout my life, in order to deal with the deficit problem, you've got to deal with entitlements. You have to deal with revenues. And you have to deal with discretionary (spending).”

    Although Republicans such as Sen. John McCain of Arizona have accused Obama of failing to take the lead in finding a way to avoid the cuts required by the Budget Control Act, Panetta said, “I think he's pushing as hard as he can…. The president of the United States has indicated the concern about sequester. He's indicated his concern about maintaining a strong national defense.  And he's proposed a solution to this. The ball is in Congress's court. They have got to take action to delay sequester.”

  • Clinton leaves State 'confident about the direction that we have set'

     

    Updated 4:32 p.m. - Hillary Rodham Clinton left the State Department on Friday"confident about the direction that we have set," handing off the secretary of state's job to former Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.

    Kerry took the oath of office, administered by Supreme Court Jusice Elena Kagan, late Friday afternoon. The private ceremony was closed to reporters. 

    The 2004 Democratic presidential nominee takes over for Clinton, who resigned her position hours earlier after a four-year term as America's top diplomat.

    In remarks at the diplomatic agency's Foggy Bottom headquarters, Clinton waxed about the familiar atmosphere at the State Department during her four years as secretary, an environment she said would extend to Kerry.

    In remarks at the diplomatic agency's Foggy Bottom headquarters, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton formally resigned her post at the State Department. Watch her entire statement.

    "Next week, I would expect that all of you will be as focused and dedicated for Secretary Kerry as you have been for me, and that you will continue to serve President Obama and our nation with the same level of professionalism and commitment that I have seen firsthand," she told throngs of department staff gathered for her remarks.

    Clinton leaves office at the height of her popularity, and amid intrigue about what her political future might hold. She remained as coy as ever about her future intentions, making no reference toward that, and focusing her remarks instead on the diplomatic corps.

    "I will be an advocate, from the outside, for the work that you continue to do here, and at [US]AID," she said.

    "I am more optimistic today than when I was when I stood here four years ago. Because I have seen, day after day, the contributions our diplomats and development experts are making," she also said, later adding: "I leave this department confident about the direction that we have set."

    Kerry was set to be sworn into office in a private ceremony later on Friday afternoon, and he'll inherit a number of complex foreign policy issues when he does.

    Included among those vexing issues is the apparent terrorist attack against a U.S. Embassy in Ankara, Turkey on Friday. Clinton, in her valedictory remarks, said that she had spoken to the ambassador to Turkey, and acknowledged the loss of "one of our foreign service nationals" in the attack.

    Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

    Hillary Clinton's life has taken her from first lady to senator to secretary of state.

  • Secret Service director to step down, announce retirement

    Mark Sullivan, the director of the Secret Service, plans to step down and announce his retirement Friday after 30 years with the agency, administration sources say.

    Sullivan has served as director since 2006 during the Bush administration. The agency found itself in the middle of a controversy after a prostitution scandal during President Obama's trip to Colombia in April 2012.

    Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson accused Sullivan of misleading Congress during a testimony in May of last year about the scandal, something other senators called "unfair."

  • Scott Brown won't run in special election to fill Kerry's Senate seat

     

    Alex Brandon / AP

    In this file photo, Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., speaks during a media availability, on Capitol Hill. Brown, who was defeated in his re-election bid, said Friday, Feb. 1, 2013 that he will not run for the Senate seat vacated by John Kerry, who was named secretary of state.

    Updated 1:51 p.m. - Former Massachusetts Republican Sen. Scott Brown, won't look to reclaim a spot in the Senate in this summer's special election to replace outgoing Sen. John Kerry.

    Brown decided against running in the special election, a Republican official told NBC News on Friday. The decision strengthens Democrats' chances of holding the seat in the special election in the June 25 special election.

    "I was not at all certain that a third Senate campaign in less than four years, and the prospect of returning to a Congress even more partisan than the one I left, was really the best way for me to continue in public service at this time. And I know it’s not the only way for me to advance the ideals and causes that matter most to me," Brown said in a statement. "That is why I am announcing today that I will not be a candidate for the United States Senate in the upcoming special election."

    The special election would have been Brown's third since his initial January 2010 election to the Senate, when he bested Democratic favorite Martha Coakley in an election to fill the seat of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy. Brown's election came at the height of the fight over health care reform in Congress, and his victory was seen as the advent of the political influence of the Tea Party movement.

    Recommended: Hagel's rough day

    Brown styled himself as a relative moderate during his time in the Senate, breaking with Republicans to approving an overhaul of financial regulations and repeal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," among other issues. A former state senator, Brown was seen as the relative favorite to win re-election during a full term in this fall's general election until Democrats managed to convince Elizabeth Warren to enter the race. Warren beat Brown, 54 to 46 percent, in November.

    Brown was seen as having an advantage had he decided to attempt to reclaim a Senate seat. A number of Democrats have endorsed Rep. Edward Markey for the Senate nomination, though Rep. Stephen Lynch will challenge Markey in the primary. Republicans maintain the discord in the Democratic primary could improve their chances of winning the election.

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