Top Ten "consulting" services offered by Bill Clinton . . . Bill Clinton established a secret company through which he funneled secret earnings that the Clintons tried to keep secret. The work was for “consulting.” I sent a team of reporters to find out just what kind of consulting advice Bill Clinton was offering to his well-heeled corporate clients. Here, for you, are the top ten. White House Dossier
Video || Hillary's
hair color advantage . . . Here’s Hillary discussing why she won’t go grey, like the rest of the presidents, from the stress of the job. White House Dossier
Five Republicans tied for top . . . Five White House hopefuls are tied atop the Republican nomination race, a national poll released Thursday showed, making it anyone's guess who will battle likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016. AFP
Jeb's corporate board problem . . . During his transition from Florida governor to likely presidential candidate, Jeb Bush served on the boards or as an adviser to at least 15 companies and nonprofits, a dizzying array of corporate connections that earned him millions of dollars and occasional
headaches. Experts question how anyone could serve so many boards at once effectively. Associated Press
GOP candidates retreat on gay marriage . . . The GOP field of announced and presumed 2016 candidates remains unanimously opposed to same-sex marriage. But in interviews and public comments, their approach quietly departs from the party's longstanding position that government-sanctioned marriage, and corresponding benefits, should be reserved for traditional unions of one man and one woman. Washington Examiner
Santorum announces populist campaign, banks on Iowa .
. . Rick Santorum, who won Iowa by 34 votes in the 2012 GOP presidential primary race -- with about 25% of caucus goers -- is looking for lightning to strike twice, in the same spot. CNN
Pataki jumps in, posts a video.
Dems: Sanders worse threat than Hillary . . . Sanders’ liberal stances make him
well-positioned to inherit the Ready for Warren constituency. Politico
Labor knocking heads on trade bill . . . The AFL-CIO was blunt in the call that went out to Rep. Scott Peters, a Democrat who represents San Diego: Vote yes on fast-track authority and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, people familiar with the conversation recall, and they’d spend a million dollars to knock him out in next year’s primary. If he managed to win, they’d drop another million against him in the general election. Politico
Rivals lash Paul on security . . . Republican presidential
contenders are beginning to go after Rand Paul, sensing that the Kentucky senator’s national security positions could become a liability with GOP primary voters. The Hill
Cruz, Lee propose school choice bill . . . As Congress considers reauthorization of the bipartisan No Child Left Behind Act, Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and Ted Cruz (R-TX) want to expand school choice by allowing low-income parents the opportunity to send their children to any public or private school of their choice. CNS News