WORLD
January 17, 2008 | By James Gerstenzang, Times Staff Writer
President Bush, wrapping up a series of visits with Arab leaders who are working to expand their economies but wary of relaxing their grip on power, on Wednesday praised Egypt as making progress toward "greater political openness." He made no mention of the Egyptian government's continued crackdowns on dissent and the jailing of an opposition presidential candidate.
BUSINESS
January 18, 2008 | By Maura Reynolds and Tom Petruno, Times Staff Writers
President Bush and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke pledged help for the economy Thursday, but their words gave no comfort to Wall Street, which suffered one of its biggest declines of the last year. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged more than 300 points, deepening the market's recent sell-off amid fears that government aid might be too late to avert a recession.
BUSINESS
January 19, 2008 | By Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer
Stepping out as the standard-bearer for an economic rescue, President Bush called Friday for about $150 billion in tax rebates and other measures designed to be a "shot in the arm" for the flagging economy. The president, who was out of the country for much of the last two weeks as bad news on the economy piled up, returned to the policy forefront by calling for an even larger plan than the $100-billion initiative being discussed in Congress.
WORLD
January 21, 2008 | By Paul Richter, Times Staff Writer
The Bush administration is beginning its last year in office by quietly scaling back its foreign policy ambitions as it struggles with new obstacles and rapidly dwindling influence. Only a few months ago, senior officials predicted that before their exit, they could deliver the Middle East peace deal that had eluded so many predecessors.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 23, 2008 | By Kenneth R. Weiss, Times Staff Writer
The California Coastal Commission argued in federal court Tuesday that President Bush violated the U.S. Constitution by trying to overturn a court order that restricted the Navy's use of a type of sonar linked to the deaths of marine mammals. The commission's attorneys said Bush's move to exempt the Navy sonar training exercises in Southern California waters from federal law violated the Constitution's separation-of-powers doctrine.
WORLD
January 27, 2008 | From the Associated Press
President Bush on Saturday bemoaned the latest assassination of a Lebanese official and told Syria and Iran to "end their interference" in their neighbor's affairs. Investigators tried to determine whether the killing was tied to past attacks against anti-Syrian politicians in Lebanon. "We demand that Syria, Iran and their allies end their interference in and obstruction of Lebanon's political process," Bush said in a statement.
NATIONAL
January 27, 2008 | By James Gerstenzang, Times Staff Writer
Beginning his final year in office with low approval ratings, a Democratic Congress and a nation fixated on choosing his successor, President Bush is preparing a State of the Union speech for Monday that will accentuate unfinished business and lay out modest goals.
NATIONAL
January 29, 2008 | By Noam N. Levey, Times Staff Writer
Echoing the limited agenda President Bush outlined in his State of the Union address, congressional Democrats are eyeing their second year in the majority with much-diminished expectations. Gone are the grandiose promises of legislation to bring the troops home from Iraq, which dominated the Democratic agenda last year and nearly ground business on Capitol Hill to a halt.
NATIONAL
February 1, 2008 | By Nicole Gaouette, Times Staff Writer
The Bush administration wants to spend 19% more on border security and immigration enforcement in the next federal budget year, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Thursday. In his annual budget request on Monday, President Bush will ask Congress to allocate $12.1 billion to construct more border fencing, hire more Border Patrol agents and expand the teams that conduct raids on businesses using illegal immigrants.
NATIONAL
February 1, 2008 | By Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer
Just two hours before President Bush began his State of the Union address earlier this week, his administration quietly issued a statement indicating that four provisions in a defense bill might not be "consistent with the constitutional authority of the president." The president's action revived a controversy over his use of so-called signing statements to express his reservations about a bill even as he signs it into law.