Your stories from the Washington Examiner

Scroll down for the latest from the Washington Examiner:

» Obama chained Clinton’s watchdog

A lax ethics environment may have allowed Clinton to work without any real oversight, outside observers say.

» Regulatory power has shifted to Fed’s Tarullo

He’s the top-level government official most immersed in oversight of the financial sector.

» Noemie Emery: Hillary’s house of no cards to play

The Democratic alternatives to Hillary don’t look much better than she does.

» 4 reasons the Hillary emails are hurting Obama

With each passing day that Clinton is silent, the White House is forced to answer questions on her behalf.

» Could Clinton be charged with a crime?

“Some of these documents clearly would be responsive to [Benghazi]. They were never produced,” said Issa.

» Editorial: Democrats sorely need a Plan B instead of a Clinton coronation

This scandal presents a problem bigger than any previous Clinton scandal.

» Lindsey Graham relishes his first 2016 campaign swing

“If this is what it’s like to run for president, it could be fun,” Graham told the audience Monday.

» Op-Ed: Elephants can remember

Ringling Bros., which will phase out its use of elephants, has done a great deal for elephant conservation.

» Order steers union issue toward Supreme Court

Illinois’ governor has banned state agencies from deducting union fees from the paychecks of non-union employees.

» Stonewalling Congress puts Obama in tough spot with Iran

GOP senators’ letter to Iranian leaders is the latest volley in an ongoing war between Obama and Congress.

» McCarthy says climate rules good for states ahead of Senate hearing

The message comes just days ahead of a Senate hearing meant to challenge EPA’s climate agenda.

» Byron York: A war of Obama’s making

There’s a war going on between the executive and legislative branches.

» Rick Perry hopes to exorcise the ‘oops’ of GOP debates

“He bombed last time, plain and simple,” an unaligned South Carolina GOP insider said.

» Watchdog: Millions of patients’ prescription painkillers jeopardized by DEA inaction

The agency missed annual deadlines to tell drugmakers how much they could make of certain controlled substances.

» How much will the next stealth bomber really cost?

Four years after it was announced, the Pentagon will soon name the contractor who will build it.

Related Content