Congress: Hacker's Paradise?
A pair of unnamed systems administrators know that the House of Representatives can be hacked - because they’ve done it.
A pair of unnamed systems administrators know that the House of Representatives can be hacked - because they’ve done it.
The 113th Congress has passed fewer measures than any other in history.
Some lawmakers are so afraid of their healthcare premiums skyrocketing when Obamacare goes into effect that they are simply considering quitting the Hill.
Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers are expressing concern that their Blackberry conversations may have been tapped by the NSA.
Chuck Schumer brags that the reform plan will get as many as 70 votes in the Senate and pass by July 4, but critics have their doubts. Liberals are raising questions, Marco Rubio wants changes, and the involvement of George Soros is getting attention.
For the second time this month, controversy is brewing over the Washington Redskins’ team name. Now the U.S. Congress is getting involved.
Tax agency official won’t testify before the congressional committee investigating the IRS scandal, her lawyer tells Chairman Darrell Issa.
Republican congressmen Dave Reichert, Paul Ryan and Devin Nunes ask tough questions and get unhelpful answers from former acting commissioner of the IRS Steven Miller in a House Ways and Means Committee hearing.
Acting IRS commissioner Steven Miller says employees were ‘off the reservation.’ Meanwhile, Darrell Issa schedules hearing next week to investigate the tax agency’s scandal.
Testifying in today’s House Oversight Committee hearing about last year’s terrorist attack on the consulate in Benghazi, former chief of mission at the U.S. embassy in Libya Gregory Hicks became emotional as he described receiving the news that Ambassador Chris Stevens had died: ”At about 3 a.m., I received a call from the prime minister of Libya. I think it’s the saddest phone call I’ve ever had in my life, and he […]