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Meet the new members: A familiar Washington face heads to Capitol Hill

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The new member: Rep. Maggie Goodlander (D-N.H.)

How they got here: Goodlander dispatched Republican Lily Tang Williams, who previously ran for Congress from Colorado, 53 percent to 47 percent.

Inside the campaign: Goodlander survived a brutal Democratic primary over Colin Van Ostern, the 2016 Democratic governor nominee in New Hampshire and the pick of retiring Rep. Ann McLane Kuster (D-N.H.), to become her party’s standard bearer for this purple seat.

Goodlander, a veteran of multiple Washington institutions who is married to President Joe Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan, centered her campaign around a vow to be a “workhorse” in Washington. “Whether you voted for me or not, if I have the honor of representing you, I will work for you — all of you — in the people’s house,” she said at her election night victory celebration.

The issues she’ll focus on: Goodlander highlighted a highly personal story of giving birth to a stillborn son throughout her time on the trail, making protecting access to reproductive health care a central part of her campaign.

She’s also vowed to fight for health care, tax reform, and housing access — and to take on corporate monopolies.

Background: She’s held a wide variety of visible roles in Washington, including a Supreme Court clerk stint, a job as an attorney with the Department of Justice and time as a Biden White House aide. Earlier in her tenure, Goodlander served as a Capitol Hill aide to then-Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.).

In addition, Goodlander served as an aide for the House Judiciary Committee during the first impeachment trial against President Donald Trump, authoring a 55-page report outlining the constitutional grounds for impeaching the president. (She’ll join a fellow impeachment trial lawyer, New York Democrat Dan Goldman, as a member of Congress.)

Campaign ad that caught our eye: Goodlander released an ad touting her efforts to work with Democrats and Republicans on a variety of issues.

Fun fact: Her bipartisan bona fides are quite personal — Goodlander’s grandfather, Samuel Tamposi, was a Republican megadonor and partial owner of the Boston Red Sox. Her mother, Betty Tamposi, was a GOP member of the state House of Representatives and an aide to then-President George H.W. Bush.

We’re spotlighting new members during the transition. Want more? Meet Sen. Tim Sheehy.

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Congress

House rejects effort to force a balanced budget in the US

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Lawmakers rejected legislation Wednesday to compel the United States to maintain a balanced budget, a perennial pursuit of fiscal conservatives that stood little chance of becoming the law of the land.

The House voted 211-207 against the resolution that would have launched an effort to amend the U.S. Constitution to bar the federal government from running a deficit. It needed to clear each chamber of Congress by a two-thirds vote, then be ratified by three-fourths of all the states.

But the measure’s consideration had major symbolic meaning for budget hawks like its sponsor, Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.).

“Many of us have been agitating for years to do a balanced budget amendment and out of the blue, they said, ‘we’re ready to do it,’” Biggs said in an interview Tuesday, referring to House GOP leaders.

“They didn’t ask me to do anything, didn’t offer anything,” he said of whether leaders scheduled the vote in an effort to court Biggs, who has in the past threatened to tank spending bills for where he hasn’t liked the price tag. “Just out of the blue, I got a call.”

A spokesperson for Speaker Mike Johnson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the timing of the measure’s consideration.

Various balanced budget amendment proposals have been offered more than a hundred times since 1999, but peaked in the 1970s and 1980s. The Pew Research Center found that balancing the budget is the single most popular subject of constitutional amendment proposals since 1999, according to analysis of legislative data from the Library of Congress.

Biggs’ latest resolution stated that “total expenditures for a year shall not exceed the average annual receipts collected in the three prior years,” adjusted for inflation and changes in the population.

It would have made an exception for war, where “specific expenditures in excess of the limit” can be approved by Congress “for any year in which a declaration of war is in effect.” Modern wars after World War II have largely been funded by debt; none of them, including the decades-long Global War on Terror, were never backed up by an official declaration of war.

The Biggs measure also would have instituted a two-thirds majority vote threshold in both chambers as necessary to approve any new tax or increase the tax rate. The GOP megabill passed last summer, which included significant tax cuts, passed the Senate in a simple majority vote through the filibuster-skirting budget reconciliation process.

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Congress

Kiley switches parties, loses committees

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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.

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Congress

Tim Scott to run for reelection to the Senate

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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.

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