Will the big changes in Congress mean big changes for federal employees? Bill Bransford, general counsel for the Senior Executives Association, joins Mike Causey for this week\'s Your Turn. November 3, 2010
As the dust settles from the midterm elections, look for changes to how cybersecurity matters are handled on Capitol Hill. Homeland Security NewsWire is reporting that Representatives Peter King of New York and Darrell Issa of California will likely chair two committees with cybersecurity oversight.
Associated Press Capitol Hill Correspondent, Jerry Bodlander, shared his analysis of election results and how the outcome might impact feds with Tom Temin and Amy Morris on the Federal Drive.
A partial shift in power on the Hill means committee chairmanships will change in the House but not in the Senate. A variety of issues from the federal budget to telework, and federal pay and regulatory policies will be re-examined.
Politico tells you what to look for in the election and what it means for 2012. Also, the Economist reports that winning or losing an election is tied to the amount of porn you look at.
Homeland Security Today\'s David Silverberg discussed how the Yemen explosives discovery will impact a cargo screening mandate.
The Business Coalition for Fair Competition wants to highlight what it believes are provisions that hurt private sector companies and forces industry to compete with the government. Jason Miller joins the DorobekINSIDER with details.
Deficit reduction will be the top priority post-election.
Sen. Dick Durbin (Ill.), the majority whip and a member of the commission, said in an interview that the \"toxic\" political environment created by the midterm elections threatens to undermine the proposals the panel is expected to make in December.
Will retirees get a one-time $250 check? On this week\'s Your Turn host Mike Causey talks with Dan Adcock and David Snell from National Active and Retired Federal Employees about the upcoming lame duck session of Congress. October 27, 2010
When your agency funding comes through may be the best indicator of how much you\'re getting. The Hill\'s Bob Cusack explains.
The Wall Street Journals reports on Congressional staffers\' trades begs the question: Why do people in power risk losing so much for a little more gain?
Warner\'s proposed legislation requires federal agencies to do less work with performance data more often. More details from Mark Warner.
According to the Wall Street Journal, at least 72 aides on both sides of the aisle traded shares of companies that their bosses help oversee. Among the staffers was an aide to a Republican member…
system, what kind of legal protection can you expect? The protection isn\'t the same for data stored on your personal home computer, and top cloud vendors say it\'s time for that to change.