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House GOP ramps up pressure on ActBlue

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The Republican chairs of three House committees are ramping up their probe into whether ActBlue, the Democratic online fundraising platform, misled members of Congress about its vetting of potential illegal foreign donations.

House Administration Chair Bryan Steil (R-Wisc.), House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) sent a letter to ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones on Tuesday requesting additional documents under subpoenas issued last year in their investigation into whether the platform knowingly accepted political donations from foreign nationals.

The letter points to a New York Times report that ActBlue’s then-outside counsel was concerned that Wallace-Jones may have misled congressional investigators in a 2023 letter to Steil’s committee regarding ActBlue’s vetting of foreign donations.

“Given ActBlue’s demonstrated history of misleading Congress, there is considerable reason to believe that ActBlue may have deliberately withheld this responsive material to impede our investigation,” the letter said.

The committee chairs also accuse ActBlue of obstructing their investigations through “noncompliance with our subpoenas.” They requested ActBlue comply by April 28.

ActBlue did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Blue Light News has not independently verified the documents cited in the New York Times story. But a post from ActBlue shortly after The Times’ story was published said Wallace-Jones “never made false statements to Congress. Her correspondence was reviewed and approved by multiple in-house and outside attorneys before it was submitted.”

Democrats have largely insisted that the House GOP probe into ActBlue, which powers Democrats’ online fundraising advantage, is politically motivated and without evidence. President Donald Trump has also repeatedly called for probes into the donor platform.

“We almost were in a, ‘This can’t be real, this can’t be serious. These are not serious people, these are not serious allegations,’” Wallace-Jones said in an interview with POLITICO last May. “And instead held on for a very long time to our traditional posture.”

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Congress

Mike Johnson faces FISA mayhem

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A key procedural step to extend U.S. government spy powers ahead of next week’s deadline is in limbo as members of the House Rules Committee Tuesday night paused their work on the legislation.

GOP leaders are trying to figure out how to get enough support for a clean extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that’s a priority for President Donald Trump, despite opposition from House GOP hard-liners.

Senior Republicans are planning to reconvene the panel at 10:15 p.m. Tuesday to try to make progress, and Republicans privately say they are closer to an agreement, according to five people.

House GOP leaders appear more open to discussing an amendment involving warrants, and hardliners also want a previously promised ban on a central bank digital currency to advance through some vehicle. In exchange, House GOP leaders are pushing for a longer extension than 18 months.

Speaker Mike Johnson wants to put a clean, 18-month FISA extension on the House floor Wednesday with the goal of final passage before the program expires April 20. But at least a dozen GOP hard-liners are vowing to oppose a procedural vote if they’re not given the chance to amend the legislation.

GOP leaders can lose two Republican votes on the committee and still advance the measure.

The next hurdle will be passing the party-line procedural vote on the House floor. Several Republicans, including Reps. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.), Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) and Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), suggested they would be open to tanking the rule vote on the floor with Johnson’s razor thin majority.

Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), a Rules Committee member, said in an interview he told the White House he would vote against the clean 18 month extension unless an amendment to prohibit warrantless surveillance of Americans was added.

“What I want is a FISA amendment for warrants,” Norman said. “You get that, we’ll be good.”

The problem for House GOP leadership, however, is that a warrants amendment is likely to pass if they allow a vote on it, scuttling Trump’s demand for a clean extension. Some Republicans also want an amendment to prevent third-party data brokers from selling information to the federal government, according to five people involved in the talks.

Administration officials invited some of the GOP holdouts to a 6:30 p.m. meeting at the White House Tuesday night, but many of them went instead to the regular meeting of the House Freedom Caucus a few blocks from the Capitol to discuss their own plans.

Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), one member who has supported the White House’s position of a clean extension, was at the Freedom Caucus’ meeting Tuesday night.

GOP leaders have been privately discussing a backup option of a shorter extension, such as 12 months, which some conservatives are open to. But several holdouts said that would not be enough to get their support.

“I don’t think a clean extension has the votes to pass,” Clyde said. “No matter how long it is.”

House GOP leaders have also discussed simply putting a rule for the clean extension on the House floor Wednesday, and letting Trump see who opposes it, before they pursue any backup plans.

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Congress

Fuller sworn in on House floor

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Rep. Clay Fuller (R-Ga.) was just sworn in on the House floor. Speaker Mike Johnson gets a rare two vote cushion for a few days as a result.

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Congress

GOP backs Trump’s war powers as Iran conflict drags on

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Senate Republicans are still backing President Donald Trump on the war against Iran, dismissing Democrats’ latest war powers push as political theater that has nothing to do with national security.

The support gives the White House more time to search for an end to the six-week-old conflict, but also risks tying the entire GOP to the unpopular war. But Republican lawmakers say the repeated Democratic objections to military intervention in Iran ignore the success of the operations so far.

“It’s just exhausting,” Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) told reporters Tuesday. “Doing a war powers resolution just undermines the president. I don’t believe [the Democrats] would do that if the president had a ‘D’ behind his name.”

Despite a range of ominous economic data tied to the war in Iran — from elevated oil prices to rising inflation — Republicans are holding firm with Trump, showing the president maintains significant sway over his party. In the Senate, Republicans have rejected three attempts to rein in the administration since the war began, with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) as the lone GOP dissenter each time.

They’re poised to do so again when the Senate holds a fourth vote on Iran as early as Wednesday.

Most Senate Republicans said they see no need to restrict Trump’s ability to launch military strikes in the name of protecting America. They believe the war powers effort is only designed to snarl Senate business and score political points.

“The goal is to suck up floor time,” said Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio). “I’m old enough to remember when [Democrats] didn’t think going into Venezuela was a good idea. And yet, you don’t hear them talk about that anymore because it was a brilliant operation.”

“War powers is a delay tactic and a messaging bill,” added Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.). “We all know it. We see it for what it is.”

The Trump administration failed to strike an agreement with Tehran to end the conflict this past weekend, though there are early indications that the two sides are zeroing in on limits to the Iranian nuclear program — something Trump has been clear about amid shifting rationales for the war.

Trump’s two-week ceasefire with Iran is set to expire on April 21. Pentagon officials have said forces in the region are prepared to resume strikes against Iran and its proxies at any time, if called upon by the president.

The administration is also approaching a deadline on April 28 which mandates congressional authorization for continued military operations. According to federal law, U.S. forces must be withdrawn from the region after 60 days unless Congress authorizes their presence, although the White House can invoke a 30-day extension for national security reasons.

But several Republicans have indicated the deadline could be a turning point for them despite their intent to oppose a fourth war powers resolution this week.

Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) has argued Congress will need to approve the continued Middle East campaign at the two-month mark, while Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said the administration “has got to start answering questions” as that point nears.

“People are gonna be looking for signs of progress,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said this week.

Another inflection point will be when the Trump administration formally requests tens of billions in emergency funding for the war, including cash to finance a blistering pace of military operations and replenish high-end missiles and air defense munitions expended in the war.

Though they have refused to rebuke Trump over the war, congressional Republicans have signaled they’ll need more details from the administration about the course of the war before approving a supplemental request, a price tag that could reach upwards of $200 billion.

Lankford called the 60-day threshold “significant,” saying that mark will require “some real debate.” But he indicated lawmakers’ most important test will occur when the administration’s supplemental request hits Capitol Hill.

“That’ll be a significant moment. The administration says, ‘Can we pay for restocking and for any future activities?’ That’s when we have our biggest debate,” Lankford told reporters. “So there is a moment coming. We all know there’s a moment coming.”

That pressure is likely to manifest in at least one public hearing in the coming weeks on the war. Senate Armed Services Chair Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) said his committee will likely hold a May hearing on the war, outside of its normal oversight of the annual defense budget.

Jordain Carney and Jennifer Scholtes contributed to this report.

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