Congress

Must Read

NYT: The Real Arithmetic of Health Care Reform

Author: Douglas Holtz-Eakin

In a New York Times op-ed, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former director of the Congressional Budget Office from 2003 to 2005, argues that information claiming the health care bill will save $138 billion dollars is skewed by accounting gimmickry and budgetary games, and laying out his own math, contends the reforms will instead raise deficits by $562 billion.

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Primary Sources

Statement of Ambassador Karl Eikenberry before the House Armed Services Committee

Thank you for the opportunity to present my views on Afghanistan today. Last week, in his speech at West Point, President Obama presented the Administration's strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan. His decision came after an intensive, deliberate and far-reaching review of conditions, risks and options available. The course he outlined offers the best path to stabilize Afghanistan and to ensure al Qaeda and other terrorist groups cannot regain a foothold to plan new attacks against our country or our allies. I fully support this approach. It has been welcomed by the Afghan government, which said it will spare no effort to achieve the strategy's key objectives. I hope it will be welcomed here in Congress.

See more in Afghanistan, Congress and Foreign Policy

Audio

Foreign Aid, Civilian Capacity, and U.S. National Security (Audio)

Speaker: Representative Nita Lowey (D-NY)
Presider: M. Peter McPherson

Listen to Representative Nita Lowey, chair, subcommittee on state, foreign operations, and related programs, House committee on appropriations (D-NY), discuss her views on the U.S. national security apparatus and the balance between civilian and military resources.

See more in Congress and Foreign Policy, Foreign Aid, Organization of Government

Op-Ed

Department of Energy Pursuing Sound Strategy but Funding is Vulnerable

Authors: Michael A. Levi and Adam Segal
Nature

As part of a larger publication, assessing the effectiveness of the economic stimulus, Michael Levi and Adam Segal write that the Department of Energy is pursuing a "prudent and sound" strategy for investing their share. The more pressing concern, according to Levi and Segal, is that Congress may forgo funding the department in favor of more "politically attractive" options.

See more in Financial Crises, Energy, Congress

Video

Countdown to Copenhagen Symposium: Session 2: Connecting Domestic and International Action

Speaker: Edward J. Markey
Presider: William L. Allen

Watch Representative Edward J. Markey, Chair, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming; Chair, Energy and Environment Subcommittee, Energy and Commerce Committee, U.S. House of Representatives (D-MA), deliver his insight into the interplay between domestic and international action on climate change.

This session was part of a CFR symposium, Countdown to Copenhagen: What's Next for Climate Change?, which was made possible through generous support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Alcoa Foundation, and the Robina Foundation.

See more in Climate Change, Congress and Foreign Policy

Audio

Countdown to Copenhagen Symposium: Session 2: Connecting Domestic and International Action (Audio)

Speaker: Edward J. Markey
Presider: William L. Allen

Listen to Representative Edward J. Markey, Chair, Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming; Chair, Energy and Environment Subcommittee, Energy and Commerce Committee, U.S. House of Representatives (D-MA), deliver his insight into the interplay between domestic and international action on climate change.

This session was part of a CFR symposium, Countdown to Copenhagen: What's Next for Climate Change?, which was made possible through generous support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Alcoa Foundation, and the Robina Foundation.

See more in United States, Climate Change, Congress and Foreign Policy