Congress
Sen. Bill Cassidy offers tepid response after meeting with RFK Jr.
The new chair of the Senate committee that oversees the Department of Health and Human Services didn’t immediately endorse President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the agency after meeting with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday.
Bill Cassidy (R-La.) wrote in a tepid social media post following the meeting that he had a “frank” conversation with Kennedy and that the two spoke “at length” about vaccines.
On Sunday, Cassidy, a doctor, told Fox News that Kennedy, who has for years contradicted health authorities by advocating against vaccination, was “wrong” about them.
Kennedy has said he doesn’t want to take vaccines away from anyone but wants to make more safety and efficacy data available to the public.
Kennedy is in the midst of a second round of meetings with senators.
Following the meeting with Cassidy, Kennedy told reporters it was “good,” but declined further comment. He is also meeting this week with members of the Democratic caucus on the committees that oversee HHS.
Kennedy got positive reviews from Republicans after a first round of meetings last month. Those included meetings with senators who oppose abortion as well as those who advocate for farm and food interests. Kennedy has in the past favored abortion rights and criticized American agricultural and food manufacturing practices.
Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.), a Southern Baptist minister before coming to Congress who describes himself as “the Senate’s most pro-life member,” told Blue Light News last month he was convinced after meeting with Kennedy that he would fall in line with the Trump administration’s abortion stance.
Republican Chuck Grassley, who has advocated for Iowa’s farmers in the Senate since 1981 and previously said he was worried about Kennedy’s desire to regulate food production and manufacturing, said in December he sees a lot to like in Kennedy’s anti-establishment views. Grassley suggested he may be willing to overlook disagreements on agricultural issues.
“Maybe he doesn’t have the right answers for me on that. But I know he’s going in and shaking up a department that needs to be shaken up,” Grassley said. “We have a mandate from the last election.”
Why it matters: Kennedy can afford to lose only three Republican votes and still get confirmed, should all Democrats vote against him.
If Cassidy were to oppose him, it would likely signal broader GOP defections.
Democrats who are doctors and public health groups have targeted Cassidy, among others, to pressure them to vote against Kennedy’s confirmation. Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, a Democrat and a doctor who is lobbying against Kennedy’s confirmation, said he hoped to meet with Cassidy about the dangers the nominee poses to public health.
What’s next: Cassidy’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, as well as the Finance Committee, are expected to hold confirmation hearings with Kennedy soon.
Congress
Kiley switches parties, loses committees
Rep. Kevin Kiley, the former Republican who recently registered as an Independent, said in an interview Wednesday he plans to caucus with the House GOP and will seek to regain his committee assignments.
The California lawmaker was formally removed from his panels Wednesday after giving official notice he was switching parties to serve as an Independent and run in a new district after his state redrew congressional maps.
The House GOP Steering Committee will need to approve Kiley’s effort to take back his seats on Education and the Workforce, Transportation and Infrastructure and Judiciary. Kiley told reporters this was “completely expected” and that he looked “forward to being reappointed as an Independent.”
Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.
Congress
Tim Scott to run for reelection to the Senate
Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) will run for reelection in 2028, his campaign told Blue Light News on Wednesday, reversing a promise to serve just two full terms in the chamber.
Appointed by then-Gov. Nikki Haley to serve out the last two years of outgoing Sen. Jim DeMint’s Senate term in 2012, Scott had long said that 2022 would mark his final bid for the Senate.
He easily won reelection that year, besting Democratic state lawmaker Krystle Matthews by more than 25 percentage points. Scott then ran for president but abandoned his short-lived bid for the White House before the Iowa caucuses.
He was briefly considered to serve as now-President Donald Trump’s running mate and has since emerged as a key White House ally in the Senate.
“And I’ll say without any question that as I think about my own reelection in 2028, I think about all the lessons I’ve learned on the campaign trail for all these other candidates, and frankly, even in South Carolina,” Scott told the Charleston, South Carolina-based Post and Courier, which was first to report his reelection plans.
Congress
Quick vote on Mullin’s DHS nomination hangs on classified briefing
Hopes for a quick vote on Sen. Markwayne Mullin’s nomination as Homeland Security secretary hang on questions about secretive travel the Oklahoma Republican undertook as a House member a decade ago that are now being examined by his Senate colleagues.
Mullin was questioned extensively about the matter Wednesday by Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Gary Peters (D-Mich.), the chair and ranking member, respectively, of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
Testifying under oath Wednesday, Mullin said he participated in what he described as “official travel” and a “classified trip” as part of a “special program inside the House” that went from 2015 to 2016. He said he was not a member of the House Intelligence Committee at the time and refused to answer further questions outside of a classified setting.
The attention on the matter came after Peters raised questions about Mullin’s past claims suggesting he had traveled to war zones and had first-hand exposure to combat environments despite his lack of a military background.
After the hearing adjourned Wednesday afternoon, Mullin joined Paul, Peters and other members of the committee in the Senate’s classified briefing facility.
“I’m one of these people who think that we silo off too much information from the public,” Paul told reporters after the hearing. “When we’re going to war, they tell eight people, it’s like, ‘Oh, we’ve notified Congress.’ So I don’t think that is adequate.”
“It makes people curious when you say, I’m doing secret missions for somebody, but I won’t tell you who, and only four people in the world know about those,” Paul added.
Mullin said only four people were “read into” the program in question and declined to say publicly what agencies or committees were involved.
“It’s a little difficult for us to go ask about a program that has no name and we have nobody that we know to talk to about it,” Peters said before Mullin agreed to the classified meeting. “So I don’t know how we would begin doing this without your cooperation.”
The questions about the shadowy travel erupted after Mullin’s nomination suddenly turned rocky after Paul questioned his temperament and fitness for office based on his past comments and behavior.
Paul later confirmed he would oppose Mullin’s nomination but said he still intended to hold a committee vote Thursday. To get through the panel with Paul opposed, Mullin will need the support of at least one Democrat.
Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) has suggested he is inclined to support Mullin but declined to confirm Wednesday he would vote for him. Fetterman was among the senators spotted entering the classified meeting following the hearing.
“I’m willing to hold the vote tomorrow, but you brought this up that you were on a super secret mission,” Paul told Mullin at the hearing.
“No, I did not say super secret,” Mullin responded. “I said it was classified.”
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