This
Week In Washington
Top 5 Stories
1.
The House is expected to pass the
$585 billion National Defense Authorization Act, following a compromise reached
by Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., and House
Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon, R-Calif.
Look ahead: The legislation grants
the president the authority to expand the military effort against ISIS
militants in Iraq and Syria.
2.
President Obama is expected to
nominate Ashton Carter, former deputy Defense secretary, to succeed Chuck Hagel
in the Pentagon's top post. The Pentagon veteran, who has maintained a low
Beltway profile while serving at at some of the leading policy minds in the
defense community, has drawn praise from both sides of the aisle.
Look ahead: Carter, a theoretical
physicist and former academic who has served in neither Congress nor the
military, offers a stark contrast to outgoing Secretary Hagel, but he could
face skepticism over his ability to oversee the war against ISIS. Like his
predecessors in the role, Carter may not like the White House's micromanagement
of Pentagon affairs.
3.
House Republican leaders are finalizing
an agreement to avert a government shutdown on Dec. 11, and expect to hold a
vote on the legislation early next week.
Look ahead: Speaker John Boehner
is relying on limited Democratic support for passage, as a bloc of conservative
Republicans is expected to reject the deal.
4.
Attorney General Eric Holder announced
the Justice Department will launch a civil-rights investigation into the death
of Eric Garner, after a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict NYPD
officer Daniel Pantaleo, sparking protests in New York and around the country.
Look ahead: The department's
Civil Rights Division and the office of Loretta Lynch, the U.S. Attorney for
the Eastern District of New York and the president's nominee to succeed Holder,
will lead the investigation.
5.
The White House announced a
three-part "plan to strengthen community policing," and Holder
previewed an announcement "in the coming days" of updated federal
guidelines to "help end racial profiling, once and for all."
Look ahead: The president assured
a diverse group of community leaders Monday he will work to advance race
relations for the remainder of his term—"not to solve every problem, not
to tear down every barrier of mistrust that may exist, but to make things
better."
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