Sean Lengell
Articles by Sean Lengell
Petraeus: Benghazi seen as terror strike right away
In his first testimony since stepping down last week, former CIA Director David H. Petraeus told a closed Capitol Hill briefing Friday that the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya "was a terrorist attack and there were terrorists involved from the start," Rep. Peter T. King said Friday. Published November 16, 2012
Investigator criticizes State spending on security
The State Department has seen dramatic boosts in diplomatic security funding and staffing but failed to spend the money strategically and didn't fill key posts, a congressional investigator said Thursday as Congress took a closer look at how four Americans died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya. Published November 15, 2012
GOP leaders back West’s call for recount
State and national Republican Party officials are getting behind Rep. Allen B. West's call for a recount of all early votes in St. Lucie County, Fla., saying it would be "unconscionable" not to answer lingering questions about the results, which show the outspoken GOP lawmaker trailing Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy. Published November 15, 2012
Early votes in West’s Florida race being recounted
Florida's secretary of state dispatched auditors Wednesday to try to get to the bottom of voting irregularities in St. Lucie County, where Rep. Allen B. West trails in vote-counting after last week's election but says there are too many questions for him to concede. Published November 14, 2012
Pelosi wants to remain House minority leader
Underscoring just how little has changed despite last week's elections, both chambers of Congress are poised to re-elect the same people to lead them into next year. Published November 14, 2012
Freshmen learn way around Hill
While Congress returned to work Tuesday facing the looming "fiscal cliff" and a slew of other pressing legislative matters, the class of freshmen lawmakers who will be sworn in in January met at the Capitol to tackle more mundane matters — such as learning the location of the nearest restrooms. Published November 13, 2012
West refusing to concede House re-election battle
Combative Republican tea party icon Rep. Allen B. West won't concede his re-election fight despite Florida ballot counts showing Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy with a slim lead. Published November 12, 2012
‘Fiscal cliff’ not Congress’ only looming peril
When Congress returns to work Tuesday for what is expected to be a hyperbusy lame-duck session, it will have more to worry about than just the looming "fiscal cliff," a series of automatic spending cuts and tax hikes scheduled to kick in at the end of the year. Published November 11, 2012
Nine House seats still undecided
One of the loudest mouths in Congress is trying to preserve his voice, as Republican Rep. Allen B. West is pushing back at election results in South Florida that show him trailing his Democratic challenger by a razor-thin margin. Published November 8, 2012
Moderates will have a voice on the Hill
Congressional moderates are down in numbers after Tuesday's elections, but they're not quite out, despite the highly charged partisanship that has engulfed Capitol Hill in recent years. Published November 7, 2012
ELECTION 2012: GOP holds House; Boehner apt to remain Speaker
Republicans retained control of the House in Tuesday's elections, according to television network projections that showed Democrats falling short of the 25 seats they needed to win to take back the chamber. Published November 6, 2012
ELECTION 2012: Morning-after reality: No easy answers to gridlock
From illegal immigrants to defense contractors and millionaires to Medicaid patients, Americans had plenty riding on Tuesday's outcome — but few were expecting the election to provide answers to the gridlock that has prevented Washington from tackling the big issues. Published November 6, 2012
Pelosi’s fate up in the air
While the world's attention is fixed on the race for president and second-in-command, the fate of the third person in the line of White House succession also will be decided Tuesday, as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi hopes her Democratic Party defies the odds to recapture the chamber. Published November 5, 2012
Long Island rematch for House seat another ‘tossup’
Randy Altschuler already had completed orientation for new members of Congress two years ago when his razor-thin lead over Democrat Timothy H. Bishop flipped into a 600-vote loss after a count of all absentee and affidavit ballots. So in this year's rematch to represent eastern Long Island, neither is taking anything for granted. Published November 1, 2012
FEMA has $3.6B for Sandy relief
While Congress is facing several unresolved issues in a potentially busy post-election lame duck session, finding additional disaster relief money for Hurricane Sandy likely won't be on the list, as FEMA and lawmakers say available funds should be sufficient. Published October 31, 2012
Glut of TV campaign ads for 2012 election far ahead of 2008’s
One of American democracy's most annoying sideshows — campaign TV commercials — abruptly will end in less than two weeks on Election Day, but not before setting some all-time records. Published October 25, 2012
Pro-lifers stand with Mourdock in flap over rape
With his statement Tuesday that pregnancy from rape is God's will, Senate candidate Richard Mourdock became the latest Republican to stumble into trouble attempting to articulate a key pro-life argument against abortion — that life begins at conception — but doing so in a way that appears insensitive to women. Published October 24, 2012
Payroll-tax break has bleak future
While the economy and proposals to help middle-income Americans have dominated the election season rhetoric, a payroll-tax cut that has put an extra $20 a week in the pockets of many workers since last year seems likely to die a quiet death in January. Published October 23, 2012
Democrats embrace super PACs to compete
Democrats have vilified super PACs since the Supreme Court deemed the murky megamoney-spenders legal in early 2010. And leading that charge has been President Obama, who, during his State of the Union speech that year, famously chastised the PACs' power for unlimited political spending with little transparency. Published October 18, 2012
House challengers up effort against GOP stalwarts
High-profile House members typically cruise toward re-election with little worry. But Democrats and their allies this year have vowed to make a few of the chamber's top Republicans sweat at least a bit during the campaign season. Published October 16, 2012