Congress
Senators hunt for possible path out of shutdown
A bipartisan group of senators is already looking for a way out of the government shutdown.
The talks, which played out on the Senate floor Wednesday as lawmakers again voted down dueling partisan funding bills, are still in their early stages. Multiple lawmakers involved said they aren’t close to finalizing a proposal.
But the nascent “gang,” as ad hoc bipartisan Senate groups are often called, is the most promising route out of the shutdown in its early hours.
Among the ideas being floated by the members involved are passing a shorter-term stopgap than the seven-week measure passed by the House, as well as possible assurances that Republicans are willing to compromise on extending soon-to-expire health insurance subsidies.
There was lots of “spitballing,” Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), who was part of the floor huddle, told reporters afterward. The goal is to provide some “room” to discuss a “Plan B” that some Democrats are seeking, he added.
Shortening the length of the funding punt could be a hard sell for Republicans, who are skeptical a deal on the insurance subsidies can be quickly notched. The House-passed continuing resolution would expire on Nov. 21, a few days before Thanksgiving.
“I think we’re better off to pass the CR to the 21st and get back to work on appropriations bills,” said Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.), shortly after he huddled with Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) off the floor.
Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), who is involved in the talks, also said a roughly 45-day bill would “suffice” and that there was “nothing wrong with trying to get more work done before in less than 45 days.”
Still, senators of both parties hailed the “productive discussion,” as Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) called it, and pledged to keep lines of communication open in the coming days. The Senate is not expected to vote again until Friday, after the Yom Kippur holiday.
Kaine said both Democrats’ health care demand and President Donald Trump’s ability to unilaterally rescind congressionally approved funding came up in the floor chat. Some Democrats want Trump’s power to rescind approved spending curtailed while negotiations play out.
“We’re talking about both, and there are good discussions going on,” Kaine said, adding that senators need a “path” for making health care fixes.
Conversations have been happening quietly among multiple members of the Senate rank-and-file for days as their party leaders remained at loggerheads. Now, with the government shut down for the first time since 2019, they are quickly gaining steam.
The backdrop is an aggressive effort from the Trump administration to pressure congressional Democrats, including threats Wednesday to withhold funding for crucial transportation projects in New York and to proceed with the mass firings of federal workers.
White House budget director Russ Vought told House Republicans on a private call Wednesday that the administration will start those layoffs “in a day or two,” according to four people on the call granted anonymity to describe it.
But there are still major sticking points. Senate Majority Leader John Thune insisted Wednesday that there would be no escape hatch into negotiations so long as the House-passed stopgap remains unpassed. There’s no indication, either, that Speaker Mike Johnson would be willing to sign off on a Senate-brokered deal or advance it through the House.
“People were looking for a way out, but the way out is to open up the government,” Thune told reporters Wednesday.
Democratic leaders immediately touted the bipartisan talks. “We’ve always believed that Democrats and Republicans should sit down to negotiate,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters. “It’s a good thing.”
While Republicans insist they will not negotiate on extending the insurance subsidies while the government is shut down, some GOP senators have suggested they could work out a framework for how the “mechanics” of the talks would go once the government is reopened to try to offer more reassurances to Democrats.
Some Republicans are also discussing dealing with the subsidies — enhanced tax credits under the Affordable Care Act that are set to expire Dec. 31 — as part of the larger appropriations process. Some senators want a deal on the issue by Nov. 1, when open enrollment for ACA plans begins, according to Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who participated in the floor discussion.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said he mostly “listened” in the floor huddle. But he said establishing some sort of framework for an extension of the tax credits — after reopening the government — was “part of what’s being discussed.”
While some Democrats — such as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries — have demanded any ACA extension get written into “ironclad” legislation as part of any deal, several Senate Democrats have been careful not to demand that the matter has to be added into a temporary stopgap.
Beyond passing a shutdown-ending funding punt, senators are also discussing the larger fiscal 2026 funding process, including moving a package of full-year spending bills that have stalled amid the shutdown fight. One idea is pairing Defense Department funding, a top priority for Republicans, with Health and Human Services funding, a top priority for Democrats.
Congress
The House Ethics Committee wants to do better
Three lawmakers accused of serious ethical lapses have been forced to resign in just over a week, prompting even members of the House Ethics Committee to question whether the panel is up to the task of policing its own.
The committee is at a moment of reckoning as it seeks to prove itself ready, willing and able to root out bad behavior in its ranks. It’s spent the past year and a half rebuilding its reputation after internal disagreements about how to handle an ethics report over ex-Rep. Matt Gaetz spilled into the public and threatened the bipartisan panel’s credibility.
Now, amid the high-profile resignations of Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-Fla.), members who sit on the highly secretive committee are opening up — eager to share their perspectives, acknowledge their limitations and defend their work.
“The reality is we are still too slow, and I believe that we should be moving faster. I’ve expressed some of my recommendations on how we can do that to staff,” said Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.), who joined the Ethics Committee this Congress, in an interview. “I want people to take the Ethics Committee more seriously.”
In extended interviews Monday and Tuesday, Ethics Chair Michael Guest (R-Miss.) said his panel is hamstrung by the House’s institutional bureaucracy.
“I’ve been asked, you know, could the Ethics Committee, if there were additional resources provided to the committee, would that help us move cases through quickly? And of course, the answer to that is yes,” Guest said. “But you know, it has to be up to leadership. It has to be up to the Speaker and the Minority Leader as to the size of the staff that they would like to see the Ethics Committee command.”
Their comments come amid questions around how Gonzales and Swalwell were able to serve in office for so long unchecked: Both were accused of engaging in sexual misconduct with former staffers, with Swalwell accused of rape. Each stepped down before the Ethics Committee ever had a chance to render findings of fault and enact punishments.
Cherfilus-McCormick also resigned moments before the Ethics Committee was due to meet Tuesday afternoon to consider a punishment for a determination that she illicitly funneled millions to support her campaign, which could have culminated in a recommendation of expulsion.
Now attention is turning to Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.), who stands accused of numerous violations, including illicitly engaging in government contracts while in federal office and threatening to release a former girlfriend’s nude videos. He has maintained he has no plans to resign as his case before the Ethics Committee has languished without resolution.
In November, the House Ethics panel quietly requested the Office of Congressional Conduct — the quasi-independent office that fields and investigates complaints against members and staff from the public — to drop its probe into Mills, according to a person with knowledge of the ethics process who was granted anonymity to describe the confidential process. That message was transmitted to the OCC the same day the House voted to effectively table a resolution offered by Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) to censure Mills for various alleged improprieties.
The OCC was established in 2008 by then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and proponents say it provides a necessary, largely independent set of eyes — including on ongoing investigations. Critics view the OCC as an untrustworthy political group; it sat defanged for months this Congress before Speaker Mike Johnson brought a perfunctory measure to the House floor that set up its ability to launch investigations by appointing its board.
Guest declined to discuss details of the Mills case but did not deny that such a request had been made, saying it was standard practice for Ethics to take the reins on a probe from OCC “once an investigative subcommittee is established.”
He conceded the Ethics Committee at times may operate slower than some would like, but its process was deliberate and thorough. “If members want this to be a rush committee where we have two weeks to come up with a report and return that report back to the body, then I’m not the right person to be serving in that room.”
He did say he hoped to discuss with Johnson how to improve the panel’s operations. One continued challenge for members is the loss of jurisdiction once a lawmaker resigns from Congress, which has historically meant the committee stops its investigation and does not release a report of its findings. Guest proposed a new policy where a report could be made public upon a lawmaker’s resignation, meaning bad actors could not always leave office in order to hide from revelations about their misdeeds.
Rep. Mark DeSaulnier of California, the top Democrat on the Ethics Committee, said the committee could better handle cases of sexual misconduct and has spoken to Democratic leadership about modernizing the panel.
“I think on sexual harassment, [the] thing that occurs to me is that there should be one place to go that’s clear to report, that has enough staff, and they’re been very well trained in the subject area, so that people feel like there’s a place they can go and be safe, protected,” he said. “And then there’s a due process that responds in a way that is deliberative, but under the urgency of circumstances.”
This is an area where the Ethics Committee has, in recent weeks, found itself struggling to respond to public pressure. When the House was poised in March to vote on a measure brought by Mace that would have compelled the committee to make information on sexual harassment claims public, Guest and DeSaulnier said in a statement it would have a chilling effect for victims. The resolution was ultimately tabled.
On Monday, the panel released a statement reaffirming its commitment to taking allegations of sexual misconduct seriously — and a list of publicly disclosed sexual misconduct investigations dating back to 1976. Many of those cases were closed without resolution because the member under scrutiny resigned from office before the committee could conclude the case.
One lawmaker who has served on the Ethics Committee, who requested anonymity to describe the panel’s private operations, argued that disclosure of sexual misconduct cases can harm potential victims who may not want their cases brought before the panel in the first place.
This explanation is largely falling on deaf ears from members who want more transparency and accountability, though, with Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) calling the Monday release of previously disclosed sexual misconduct allegations against House members an inadequate “cleanup job.”
Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.), a member of the Ethics Committee and a former federal prosecutor, suggested that improving the panel’s internal systems for handling sexual harassment claims might be a lost cause.
“I think the ugly truth is there’s no process that handles this well that I’ve seen, whether it’s state courts, federal courts, internal corporate investigations, Congress or the Senate,” he said.
Congress
Senate launches budget debate
Senate Republicans opened debate Tuesday on a fiscal blueprint meant to pave the way for passage of a party-line immigration enforcement funding bill later this year.
The Senate voted 52-46 to advance the budget resolution, which Budget Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) unveiled earlier Tuesday. It instructs House and Senate committees to write legislation expected to deliver about $70 billion to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other agencies.
The Senate is expected to give the measure final approval this week before leaving town. The chamber could move to a marathon voting session, known as a vote-a-rama, as soon as Wednesday, though plenty of Republicans are betting that it won’t start until Thursday.
Congress
Cherfilus-McCormick resigns amid ethics investigation
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-Fla.) has resigned in the face of corruption charges at home and calls for her ouster in Washington, she announced in a statement on Tuesday.
News broke minutes before the House Ethics Committee was about to meet for a public hearing Tuesday afternoon to determine a punishment for the third-term Democrat, who was charged with stealing $5 million in Covid relief funds.
Cherfilus-McCormick said in a statement the Ethics proceedings did not constitute a “fair process” and that she was “choos[ing] to step aside” rather than “play these political games.”
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