Connect with us

Congress

Rep. Thomas Massie launched a long-shot attempt to force a vote on releasing Epstein files

Published

on

Rep. Thomas Massie announced Tuesday he’d kickstart a long-shot procedural maneuver to force a vote on releasing Jeffrey Epstein-related files.

The Kentucky Republican, alongside Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), is launching a so-called discharge petition to bypass leadership and allow a floor vote on the release of the materials — provided the petition gets the 218 lawmaker signatures.

“We all deserve to know what’s in the Epstein files, who’s implicated, and how deep this corruption goes,” Massie wrote on X. “Americans were promised justice and transparency.”

The discharge petition gambit is rarely successful, with many majority-party members hesitant to buck their own leaders even if they support the underlying premise. But Republicans have been roiled by divisions over the Trump administration’s handling of the investigation into Epstein, the disgraced financier who died in jail after being charged with sex trafficking.

Some Republicans like Massie have called for more disclosure from the administration after the Justice Department said there was no evidence Epstein had a “client list” or that he was murdered, despite suggestion from President Donald Trump and his allies during the 2024 campaign that they believed such information was being hidden from the public. Democrats, in turn, have needled the GOP over the controversy and attempted to turn a procedural vote Tuesday into a referendum on releasing more Epstein files.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Congress

Oz to huddle with House tax writers

Published

on

Democrats and Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee are set to have a bipartisan meeting next Wednesday with Mehmet Oz, President Donald Trump’s administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, as congressional tax writers eye year-end health care legislation following their work in helping craft the “big, beautiful bill.”

According to a notice of the meeting viewed by Blue Light News, Ways and Means members are invited “to discuss the priorities” of CMS on July 23, including issues “involving health care matters” that fall within the jurisdiction of the panel.

Conversation could turn to what’s next for Ways and Means and its counterpart in the Senate, the Finance Committee, where Republicans are actively discussing interest in moving an overhaul to the operations of pharmaceutical benefit managers, the intermediaries who negotiate drug prices between pharmacies and manufacturers.

Discussion next week could also focus on the critical role Oz played in reassuring Senate Republicans that hospitals in their states could tap into a rural hospital relief fund amid steep cuts to Medicaid in the GOP megabill.

Continue Reading

Congress

Zohran Mamdani briefs House Democrats on lessons from his campaign

Published

on

Zohran Mamdani, the polarizing Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, huddled privately Wednesday with Democratic lawmakers at a Washington restaurant. The conversation, attendees said, focused on campaign strategy and lessons learned from his surprise win.

Those included “the effective communications strategy that they employed, very dynamic and natural,” said Rep. Chuy Garcia (D-Ill.). “And it allowed him to project who he is and his vision for New York.” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) organized the event, which was billed as a “communication and organizing skill share” breakfast.

Ocasio-Cortez and Mamdani both left the roughly two-hour meeting without appearing or speaking with reporters. A Mamdani spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

As Democrats search for a winning message and campaign strategy heading into the 2026 midterms, some in the party have pointed to Mamdani’s campaign and its social media virality as evidence they need to focus more on cost-of-living issues than other hot-button culture war issues.

Attendees were largely from the left flank of the party; centrists have publicly and privately expressed concern about Mamdani, who identifies as a Democratic Socialist, being a liability for the party nationally. Hakeem Jeffries, the top House Democratic leader and a fellow New Yorker, has so far withheld an endorsement pending a meeting with Mamdani.

Rep. Laura Gillen (D-N.Y.), who represents a purple Long Island district, has gone so far as to brand Mamdani as “too extreme” to lead the city. But those leaving the meeting spoke positively about him and his campaign.

“There is no debating that the campaign that he ran was a successful one. His economic message, his ability to cut through and just speak to people’s pain points in New York City,” said Rep. Lori Trahan (D-Mass.). “And then how he did it, right, the videos, the media, the volunteers, the organizing. … We talked about the lessons from that campaign and how it can really impact the way we speak to voters.”

“The party can learn a lot from him and AOC about digital communication and organizing,” added Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.).

Continue Reading

Congress

Trio of crypto bills back on track, Scalise says

Published

on

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said he expects votes on all three cryptocurrency bills that Republicans are pushing to go to the House floor Wednesday, though leadership is still weighing how to sequence or combine them.

“We’re bringing all of them,” Scalise said in a brief interview. “We’re back on track. And exactly what the combination will be, we’re talking through that, but all three bills will be encompassed in the work we do today.”

The slate of crypto bills includes a sweeping market structure measure known as the CLARITY Act, Senate-passed stablecoin legislation called the GENIUS Act and a third measure to ban a central bank digital currency.

“They’re all going to pass,” House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) told reporters entering the speaker’s office Wednesday morning. How they pass, though, remains an open question.

GOP leaders could seek to merge the CBDC ban into the CLARITY Act in order to appease conservative hard-liners who brought down a key procedural vote Tuesday. The holdouts say they secured a promise from Trump to add CBDC language into CLARITY, but GOP leaders have balked at directly linking the two.

The market structure bill has bipartisan support, but most Democrats oppose banning a CBDC, which is a government-issued digital dollar that conservatives say would open the door to privacy invasions.

A senior Republican granted anonymity to describe private scheduling conversations said if the sequencing isn’t figured out today, the entire slate of bills could get pushed into next week.

Continue Reading

Trending