Connect with us

Congress

Capitol agenda: Beyond the budget fight

Published

on

House and Senate Republicans finally agreed on the same budget framework to tee up President Donald Trump’s tax, border security and energy agenda. The bigger challenge will be wrangling Republicans to agree on the specifics of sweeping program cuts and policy details needed to fulfill Trump’s pledges.

As committee chairs get to work over the two-week Easter recess, here’s a rundown of three of the biggest fights they face:

Medicaid — Republicans can no longer avoid figuring out how to slash $880 billion from programs under House Energy and Commerce, an element of the budget that’s poised to lead to Medicaid cuts. Moderates are wary of changes that could lead to benefit reductions, while conservative hard-liners want to make deep cuts to the program.

Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump insist they have no plans to trim benefits and are instead looking to tackle what they see as “waste, fraud and abuse.” But that alone won’t be enough to meet the $880 billion target. Johnson acknowledged Thursday that Republicans are looking at “other areas,” without giving any details.

Some Medicaid changes being considered: One idea is to reduce the federal share of payments for certain beneficiaries, since it’s a joint state-federal program. Another is to include work requirements, something even Senate Republicans otherwise wary of cutting benefits say they support.

Taxes — Both chambers will have plenty to hammer out between extending Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and enacting his campaign tax promises. Several blue-state moderate Republicans, including Reps. Mike Lawler and Nicole Malliotakis, are pushing to raise a key deduction for state and local taxes. Expect that to run into resistance from House hard-liners.

Other Republicans, including Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo and Sen. Josh Hawley, are eyeing an expansion of the Child Tax Credit, something that’s quietly gaining traction in both chambers but that deficit hawks could also oppose.

Clean-energy credits — Conservatives want to undo former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. But a growing number of Republicans are fighting to preserve the law’s clean-energy tax credits. Four GOP senators — enough to stop the reconciliation package — wrote to Majority Leader John Thune in defense of the tax credits this week. Sen. Lisa Murkowski told Blue Light News that the group is prepared to use its leverage. One possible compromise would be to revamp the credits to reduce their cost.

What else we’re watching:

HHS staff briefs E&C: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s HHS staff will brief bipartisan staff from House Energy and Commerce members on his overhaul of the agency today, including sweeping layoffs and a major reorganization. It comes after members of Congress on both sides of the aisle and in both chambers were surprised by the drastic changes.

Schumer’s upcoming vacancy: Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet is expected to launch a run for Colorado governor today, potentially giving Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer another seat to defend down the line.

Ben Leonard, Elena Schneider and Josh Siegel contributed to this report.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Congress

Capitol agenda: Democrats steer into a shutdown

Published

on

Democrats are flirting with a shutdown. Their endgame is unclear.

Democrats are rallying around a hard-line approach to try to bring Republicans to the table to strike a government funding deal but don’t have a clear view of what victory looks like. For now, it’s primarily about showing some fight.

“We may not have the luxury of a victory scenario,” Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) said. “I think what we’re trying to do is avoid things getting worse. I don’t think victory is in anyone’s hopes and dreams in this moment.”

Democrats on Wednesday night released their own vision of a stopgap funding bill that would extend health care subsidies and undo Medicaid cuts. It’s an attempt at a rallying cry for a party that’s not quite moving in lockstep on a shutdown strategy.

“The Schumer Shutdown Plan reads like a draft of the platform for the 2028 Democrat National Convention,” Senate GOP Whip John Barrasso will say during a floor speech Thursday.

Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) has already vowed to support the GOP’s funding patch, and several other Democratic senators have yet to commit to opposing it. Frontline House Democrats including Reps. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (Wash.) and Jared Golden (Maine) have also been cagey in recent days about whether they’ll oppose the Republican CR.

Democrats will privately huddle in their respective chambers Thursday to discuss strategy.

Speaker Mike Johnson is working to shore up his own ranks as he eyes a Friday morning vote on the GOP CR.

Several Republicans are fighting to increase the bill’s allocation of $30 million for additional member security, among them Reps. Tim Burchett (Tenn.) and Anna Paulina Luna (Fla.). Republicans can lose only two votes at full attendance without Democratic support. GOP Reps. Victoria Spartz (Ind.), Warren Davidson (Ohio) and Thomas Massie (Ky.) have threatened to oppose it.

What else we’re watching:   

— Senate GOP to flex new rules for nominees: The Senate is set to confirm 48 nominees Thursday with a single vote, after Republicans changed the chamber’s rules to allow batch confirmations of most executive nominees and district court judges. The group includes picks from the Energy and Defense Departments. It also includes Kimberly Guilfoyle, who’s nominated to be ambassador to Greece, and Callista Gingrich, who’s nominated to be ambassador to Switzerland.

— D.C. officials to testify on Blue Light News: The District of Columbia’s top elected officials are set to appear before Congress on Thursday for the first time since Trump temporarily assumed control of the Metropolitan Police Department and deployed the National Guard throughout the capital city. Mayor Muriel Bowser, Council Chair Phil Mendelson and Attorney General Brian Schwalb will face tough questioning from Republicans on their handling of crime in the District, even as it reported a 30-year low in violent crime last year.

Nicholas Wu, Jordain Carney and Hailey Fuchs contributed to this report. 

Continue Reading

Congress

Democrats’ shutdown endgame is sketchy as deadline looms

Published

on

Democrats are gearing up to reject a GOP stopgap funding bill and potentially spark a government shutdown. What happens then, no one seems to know.

Two weeks ahead of the key deadline, party leaders are staking out a rhetorical hard line demanding that their Republican counterparts come to the negotiating table to discuss concessions on health care and other issues.

They released an alternative funding patch Wednesday that extends government funding through the end of October and tacks on a host of policy demands, including an extension of health care subsidies, the repeal of Medicaid cuts in the GOP megabill and more.

Democrats hope the counteroffer will kindle bipartisan talks. But Republicans are instead accusing them of hypocrisy, citing all the times they insisted the GOP had to swallow a “clean” short-term funding bill in past shutdown fights.

Still, under tremendous pressure from their base to show that they are willing to fight President Donald Trump, Democrats are flirting with a politically risky shutdown without a firm exit plan or even an idea of what victory might look like.

“We may not have the luxury of a victory scenario,” said Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.). “I think what we’re trying to do is avoid things getting worse. I don’t think victory is in anyone’s hopes and dreams in this moment.”

Thus far, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries have focused on the lowest common denominator uniting the various factions inside their ranks: demanding negotiations in return for Democratic votes to avoid a shutdown — which are necessary due to the Senate filibuster.

But their GOP counterparts, Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, have been more than happy to turn the tables and paint Democrats as the ones making unreasonable demands.

Already chafing at the lack of GOP outreach, Democrats were further inflamed by Trump, who said on Friday that Republicans shouldn’t “even bother dealing with them” on a funding deal, Senate math notwithstanding.

“We have a lot of diverse views in the caucus, but we’re all professional politicians and an iron law in politics is that if you want someone’s vote, you have to ask what it would take to get it,” said Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii, who is in line to be the next Democratic whip. “And they haven’t even asked.”

Unlike in March, when Schumer flinched in a similarstandoff, party leaders are now betting they’re on firmer political ground for a fight. But it’s still not clear just how comfortable Democrats, who have generally tried to portray themselves as Capitol Hill’s “adults in the room,” will feel as a possible Oct. 1 shutdown grows nearer — or after one comes to pass.

Asked Wednesday night if he was willing to shut the government down, Schumer bristled: “Ask the Republicans if they are willing to shut the government down.”

Democrats could lose some of their own members on the GOP bill. Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) has already vowed to support it, and several other Democratic senators have yet to put themselves in the “no” column with the whip effort still underway.

Jeffries privately huddled with swing-district lawmakers Wednesday morning to hear out their concerns. Most of them, while publicly declining to commit to opposing the stopgap funding bill, are staking out conditions for support that the GOP is unlikely to give them this month — or ever.

There are few signs from Republicans that they will be any more amenable to opposition demands if Senate Democrats reject the seven-week GOP funding bill and the government potentially shuts down.

Asked about the idea that Republicans had to give Democrats something in return for their votes, the typically affable Thune snapped Wednesday, arguing that Republicans supported similar funding bills more than a dozen times in recent years.

“What we’re talking about right now is giving the appropriators a chance to actually pass bills. … Is that difficult to understand?” Thune said. “Where are we supposed to do big policy initiatives on a seven-week extension to fund the government?”

Thune indicated this week that Schumer is free to call him or come to his office for a meeting. Democrats believe the South Dakota Republican, as majority leader, has to initiate the negotiations.

Meanwhile, there is hardly a firm consensus on what Democrats would consider a worthy trade for their votes beyond a general emphasis on health care. Most Democrats agree they need to push for an extension of health insurance subsidies that are set to expire next year as a baseline demand. Others want to push for the unlikely reversal of the Medicaid cuts from the GOP’s “big, beautiful” bill. Still others want firm protections against future Trump administration attempts to withhold congressionally approved spending.

“We expect them to come and negotiate and to live up to what they told their voters back in ’24, not even a year ago, what they were going to do, which was lower costs. And health care is a huge part of that,” House Minority Whip Katherine Clark told reporters Wednesday.

Many of those demands were included in Democrats’ alternative stopgap released Wednesday. But GOP leaders insist there is no way to cut a deal in the time remaining — even on extending the expiring health subsidies, which has some Republican support. Schumer and Jeffries have been cagey about possibly swallowing a short-term funding punt now in exchange for potential negotiations later.

Asked Wednesday evening if getting a commitment to work on issues like the health care subsidies would be enough to get Democrats on board with a stopgap, Schumer did not definitively reject the idea.

“We have two weeks,” he said. “They should sit down and talk to us and we maybe can get to a good proposal, let’s see. But when they don’t talk to us, there’s no hope of getting to a good proposal.”

And pressed Wednesday about whether their calls for “bipartisan negotiation” meant that any talks had to be concluded by Sept. 30 or if ongoing talks would be enough, several Democratic senators declined to answer directly.

“That’s a very smart question. I’m not sure I know the answer,” said Schatz, adding that Thune’s “come by anytime” rhetoric is not the way things should work.

More generally, a sense of gung-ho enthusiasm about a shutdown fight was hard to detect inside the Democratic ranks.

Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), who represents hundreds of thousands of federal workers who would be furloughed in a shutdown, suggested it was a little too early to go to the mattresses.

“What is today — the 17th of September?” he said. “Let’s have a debate about the alternative.”

Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democratic leader who joined Schumer to advance the GOP funding bill in March, indicated Wednesday that he expects to vote against Republicans’ proposal this time.

But asked if he was comfortable going into a shutdown, Durbin rejected the premise.

“There’s another option available,” he said. “And that’s bipartisan negotiation.”

Continue Reading

Congress

Democrats unveil funding alternative to counter GOP in shutdown brawl

Published

on

Congressional Democrats released bill text Wednesday night for their own stopgap spending proposal as they dig in against a House Republican-backed measure that would fund the government until late November.

The new Democratic proposal links funding the government through Oct. 31 to two of the party’s other priorities: health care assistance and placing limits on President Donald Trump’s ability to unilaterally roll back funds previously approved by Congress.

The Democratic stopgap bill has virtually no chance of passing the Senate — much less getting to Trump’s desk before the end-of-the-month deadline to avert a shutdown. But it allows Democrats to rally behind a plan that will win a broad swath of support among their members in the House and Senate.

“We invite Republican leadership to finally join Democratic leadership at the negotiating table, which they have refused for weeks to do, to prevent a shutdown and begin bipartisan negotiations to keep the government funded,” Congress’ top Democratic appropriators, Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro and Washington Sen. Patty Murray, said in a joint statement.

The Democrats’ bill would extend boosted Affordable Care Act insurance subsidies that will otherwise expire on Dec. 31. It also would reverse cuts to Medicaid and other health programs that Republicans enacted as part of their party-line megabill this summer.

Schumer hasn’t explicitly demanded that an extension of the expiring health care subsidies be attached to the stopgap bill, but Democrats also believe Congress can’t wait until the end of the year because Americans will need to make decisions about health insurance before that time.

The Democratic alternative comes after House Republicans unveiled their own funding proposal to punt the shutdown deadline to Nov. 21, which they want voted on their chamber floor by Friday. That offer also would include $30 million for lawmaker security and another $58 million in security assistance requested by the White House for the Supreme Court and executive branch.

But Democrats have bristled over the GOP proposal because Republican leaders are, so far, not negotiating with them. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries sent two letters to Majority Leader John Thune and Speaker MIke Johnson requesting a meeting but said they had been ignored.

“Democrats do not want a government shutdown. We’ve asked Republican leadership multiple times to meet with us to start negotiating,” Schumer told reporters Tuesday after a closed-door caucus lunch where Democrats discussed offering an alternative proposal.

Thune opened the door Tuesdayto meeting with Schumer. But Democrats largely brushed off his comments, accusing Republicans of bending to Trump after the president said in a Fox News interview late last week that he didn’t need Democratic support. The Senate will need 60 votes to advance the spending deal, which will necessitate help from Democrats.

Despite both Senate leaders now claiming they are willing to meet, as of early Wednesday evening nothing was on the books yet.

Katherine Tully-McManus contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Trending