Skip to content
Advertisement

Stephen Dinan

Stephen Dinan

Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.

Articles by Stephen Dinan

Divided court strikes down campaign money restrictions

Interest groups, unions and corporations are now allowed to pay for political ads, a Supreme Court decision that will carry profound implications for money's role in American campaigns. Published January 21, 2010

‘Scott Brown’ candidates rising up

As Washington struggled to discern a meaning from Massachusetts' special election, candidates outside the Beltway said one message is clear: Outsider, grass-roots campaigns that tap voters' anger at Washington arrogance will win in 2010. Published January 21, 2010

Tough reviews for Obama’s first year

A year ago, Medea Benjamin, co-founder of anti-war protest group Code Pink, was seated on the Capitol's West Front, 100 feet from the inauguration stage, watching Barack Obama be sworn in as president. Published January 20, 2010

Social Security rarely uses E-Verify

Despite helping run the government's electronic database designed to weed out illegal-immigrant workers, Social Security failed to run E-Verify checks on its own employees nearly 20 percent of the time. Published January 18, 2010

Illegal Haitians get short-term legal status

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Friday granted an 18-month amnesty to Haitians who were in the U.S. as illegal immigrants or legal visitors at the time of this week's earthquake. Published January 16, 2010

Debate on Haitian refugees’ status begins

Americans are already pouring humanitarian aid into Haiti, but the next question for President Obama will be whether to grant temporary legal residence to tens of thousands of illegal immigrants and legal visitors from Haiti. Published January 15, 2010

EXCLUSIVE: Obama wins more spending cuts than Bush

President Obama notched substantial successes in spending cuts last year, winning 60 percent of his proposed cuts and managing to get Congress to ax several programs that had bedeviled George W. Bush for years. Published January 14, 2010

Troops confused, Republicans say

Congressional Republicans just back from a trip to Afghanistan said Tuesday that the Obama administration's approach to the war has confused U.S. troops, leaving them "dangerously" preoccupied with worrying about captured enemy fighters' rights. Published January 13, 2010

GOP: Obama’s Afghan policies confusing

Republican lawmakers just back from Afghanistan say the Obama administration's approach to the war has befuddled U.S. troops, leaving them "dangerously" preoccupied with worrying about captured enemy fighters' rights. Published January 12, 2010

Obama in no rush for State of Union

The State of the Union address may be going the way of the NFL's Super Bowl, another January tradition that has become a February fixture. Published January 12, 2010

Pro-immigration groups ready to fight

Pro-immigration groups are more united, better-funded and, unlike the last battle in 2007, are ready to fight back against what they say is a wave of hatred from opponents as they gear up for another bruising immigration fight in Congress. Published January 11, 2010

Dorgan to retire; GOP sees opening

Sen. Byron L. Dorgan announced Tuesday he will not seek re-election this year, becoming the first elected Democratic senator to say he will retire — and creating an opening for Republicans this fall. Published January 6, 2010

Making progress on pork busting

Earmarks — the pet projects members of Congress slip into spending bills — have become a symbol of how Washington works and of its worst excesses. Published January 5, 2010

‘Historic’ health care bill passes Senate

At the break of dawn on Christmas Eve, Senate Democrats passed their version of health care reform, advancing the issue further than ever before and setting up a potentially rocky reconciliation with the House legislation. Published December 25, 2009

Senate passes health care bill in historic vote

UPDATED: The Senate early Christmas Eve morning passed its version of a health care overhaul, advancing the issue further than ever before and setting up a bruising stretch-run early next year to get a final bill to President Obama. Published December 24, 2009

Long history of vote-trading on Capitol Hill

UPDATED: As it has come down in history, President Andrew Johnson's narrow escape from being the first president convicted on impeachment charges in 1868 depended on the honorable doings of Sen. Edmund Ross of Kansas. Published December 24, 2009

Health bill faces constitutional challenge

With their procedural options in the Senate exhausted, Republicans are looking to the Constitution for a way to fight the Democrats' health care reform bill. Published December 23, 2009

Senate clears second hurdle on health care

In a series of votes Tuesday morning, the Senate hurdled another procedural roadblock to health care and remained on track to pass Democrats' bill by Christmas. Published December 22, 2009

Defense bill comes at a price for taxpayers

President Obama won most of his spending fights with Congress over the Defense Department this year, but it cost several billion dollars of taxpayers' money to buy legislative peace. Published December 22, 2009