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Defense bill, nominee meetings and judges headline crucial December Hill week

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While you’re busy buying presents and running to the dry cleaners after yet another holiday party, Congress is racing toward the end of the year — and one of the final weeks in session of Joe Biden’s presidency.

Top of mind: Getting a compromise version of the annual defense policy bill across the finish line. The House Rules Committee meets at 4 p.m. in hopes of teeing up the measure (all 1,800+ pages of it) for floor consideration; if hard-line conservatives block that path, look for Speaker Mike Johnson to put it up under suspension, relying on Democratic votes for the must-pass measure.

There’s no white smoke yet, but we’ll also keep a close watch for progress on a short-term government spending patch. Current funding levels run out on Dec. 20, and there are always bipartisan wishes to get home for the holidays.

Other things on the radar as another week kicks off in Washington:

Two new senators: Democratic Sens.-elect Adam Schiff (Calif.) and Andy Kim (N.J.) will become the newest members of the chamber Monday.

Judges, judges, judges: The House Rules Committee will tee up floor consideration of a Senate-passed measure expanding the number of federal court judicial seats gradually over the next decade. Some progressives have urged the White House to oppose the bill now that President-elect Donald Trump will get to fill some of those posts, but Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) defended the bill last week. “It is really balanced and it’s implemented over a period of years,” Durbin told reporters. “So there might be a political bias but it’s not built into it. It depends on how the voters decide to come up with the next president.”

Side note: Democrats are closing in on 234 judges confirmed, the number that got through the Senate during Trump’s first term. The current tally for Biden’s presidency will hit 230 after senators confirm Tiffany Johnson to a Georgia federal district court slot on Monday evening.

More nominee meetings: More of Trump’s Cabinet picks are expected on Blue Light News this week to meet with Republican senators, including embattled Defense Department pick Pete Hegseth and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, his pick to be director of national intelligence. On Hegseth, Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), vowed over the weekend to conduct a “thorough vetting” of the pick and will hold another meeting with him. And Gabbard, who has drawn criticism for previously meeting with the newly ousted Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, is being seen as the next Trump nominee likely to hit major turbulence in the Senate.

Who says Congress is gridlocked? The House is about to take up a bill granting 39 communities their own unique zip codes. Good news for you Scotland, Conn., Goose Creek, S.C. and Montz, La., among others.

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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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Quick vote on Mullin’s DHS nomination hangs on classified briefing

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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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Markwayne Mullin’s DHS nomination not at risk from Rand Paul, Thune says

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he is confident Sen. Markwayne Mullin will be confirmed as the next secretary of Homeland Security despite a contentious exchange with fellow GOP Sen. Rand Paul at a hearing Wednesday.

Paul, the chair of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, sharply questioned the Oklahoma senator about past remarks that he “understood” why Paul suffered a heinous assault from a neighbor in 2017. Mullin refused to apologize for the remark.

“Those two obviously have some history, and it’s, you know, personal stuff,” Thune said. “They’ve got to work through it. I mean, in the end, this is about the job, and it’s about making sure that we got the right person there. I think Markwayne is the right person for the job.”

Asked if he was still confident Mullin can be confirmed, Thune said, “Yeah.”

Paul has scheduled a committee vote on Mullin for Thursday. While Paul’s vote is in serious doubt, Mullin could win over Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, who has expressed support for Mullin previously and said Wednesday he would approach the nomination “with an open mind.”

“I haven’t been rocked by some mic-dropping kind of moments,” Fetterman told reporters after the hearing.

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