Stephen Dinan
Articles by Stephen Dinan
DHS: Illegal immigrant students not a target for deportation
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Friday that illegal immigrant students and young adults who meet the criteria in last year's failed legalization bill in Congress are not a "priority" for her department's law enforcement efforts. Published April 1, 2011
Activists fight immigrant roundups
With deportations up under President Obama, immigration rights advocates on Thursday called on him to use executive authority to reduce the number of illegal immigrants being deported, and vowed a city-by-city campaign to press the issue. Published March 31, 2011
Boehner denies spending deal is done
House Speaker John A. Boehner told reporters Thursday that there is no final deal on a spending-cuts number, countering claims by Democrats that all sides have settled on about $33 billion in cuts. Published March 31, 2011
Feds’ praise for medical pot goes up in smoke
For a brief time earlier this month the National Cancer Institute, a branch of the federal government's National Institutes of Health, had posted a webpage touting the possible benefits of marijuana in fighting cancer tumors. But less than two weeks after it went up, the webpage was altered and the approving words stricken. Published March 30, 2011
Spending fight in Senate turns to GOP riders
Democrats said Tuesday that in an effort to find a spending compromise that would keep the government from shutting down April 8, they are willing to look at some of the legislative add-ons House Republicans tacked onto their spending-cuts bill. Published March 29, 2011
White House: ‘No mercy’ is not a doctrine
As President Obama addressed the country Monday to explain his decision 10 days ago to attack Libya, the White House insisted there are no broader axioms to draw from it, and his top advisers said it is not a precedent for what he might do in Syria, Sudan or other situations. Published March 28, 2011
Obama rules out back-door legalization of immigrants
President Obama said Monday that he does not have the power to suspend deportations, putting the nail in a plan some administration officials had explored that could have granted de-facto legal status to hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants. Published March 28, 2011
Little progress as shutdown deadline looms
Congress gave itself a three-week reprieve on a government shutdown, then spent the first 10 days on vacation. Now, lawmakers return with the shutdown deadline once again looming, and a deal seemingly as far away as ever. Published March 27, 2011
Obama wins F-35 engine battle with Congress
The F-35 fighter jet's alternate engine has survived White House veto threats and knock-down congressional budget battles, but on Thursday the Pentagon finally said it is halting spending — delivering a major, albeit short-term, victory to President Obama. Published March 24, 2011
Boehner seeks clarification of goals for Libya mission
With some members of Congress already staging a minor rebellion against President Obama's decision to attack Libya, House Speaker John A. Boehner on Wednesday blasted the administration for "contradictory" statements and told the president to lay out concrete goals for U.S. action. Published March 23, 2011
Capitol Hill falls silent as Libya war rages
The world is at war, but Washington is eerily empty, devoid of all the power players who normally foster a soul-searching debate when the country goes on the attack. Published March 21, 2011
CBO: Obama’s budget doesn’t reach primary balance
Congress' chief scorekeeper says President Obama's budget never achieves primary balance, the key measure the White House said would show the country is living within its means. Published March 18, 2011
Hill extends temporary funding, OKs a vacation
Congress on Thursday pushed a government shutdown back another three weeks then approved taking a vacation next week, leaving the hard work of striking a long-term deal for another day. Published March 17, 2011
Budget-busting station named for Biden
As a thank-you to its most famous customer, Amtrak is renaming the train station in Wilmington, Del., after stimulus "sheriff" Vice President Joseph R. Biden — after the project received $20 million in stimulus money and came in $5.7 million over the initial announced budget. Published March 17, 2011
House votes to strip funding for NPR
The Republican-dominated House on Thursday voted to block taxpayer funding for National Public Radio programming, dealing another blow to the broadcasting network that already is reeling from a yearlong series of missteps. Published March 17, 2011
Congress passes second bill to avert shutdown
Congress on Thursday pushed a government shutdown back another three weeks then approved taking a vacation next week, leaving the hard work of striking a long-term deal for another day. Published March 17, 2011
GAO’s report on waste suddenly a Hill must-read
Move over, Tom Clancy — the newest thriller to go viral, at least by federal government report standards, is the Government Accountability Office's just-published look at waste and duplication in federal agencies. Published March 15, 2011
Democrats key for passage of spending bill
Facing a rebellion among their conservative members, House Republicans had to turn to Democrats on Tuesday to pass a short-term spending bill that will delay a government shutdown by three weeks. Published March 15, 2011
Cutting budget tougher as fiscal year’s funds dwindle
Republicans are finding that the logistics of cutting spending becomes trickier as the fiscal year winds down and more money gets spent. Published March 14, 2011
Napolitano: Slain agent wasn’t unarmed
Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was armed with a pistol and a rifle during the December gunbattle with border bandits that cost him his life, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said in a letter last week meant to counter lingering questions about the agent's death. Published March 11, 2011