Congress
Trump appoints real estate investor, golf partner as Middle East peace envoy
President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he will name real estate investor and philanthropist Steven Witkoff to be a special envoy to the Middle East.
In a statement, Trump said that Witkoff, a New York investor who owns a large property portfolio in New York and other major U.S. cities, “has made every project and community he has been involved with stronger and more prosperous.” He added: “Steve will be an unrelenting Voice for PEACE, and make us all proud.”
Witkoff was already appointed the co-chair of Trump’s inauguration this January, alongside GOP donor and former Sen. Kelly Loeffler of Georgia. He’s also a close friend of the president-elect, speaking at the Republican National Convention in July 2024. Witkoff was also on the golf course with Trump during a September assassination attempt against him in Florida.
It is unclear what the role of Middle East special envoy will entail under Trump, as special envoys are not standard diplomats. President Joe Biden appointed two Middle East special envoys, Lise Grande and David Satterfield, who specifically focus on humanitarian issues in the region emerging from the war in the Gaza Strip. And Trump appointed longtime adviser and lawyer Jason Greenblatt as a special envoy to the Middle East to help with the negotiations of the Abraham Accords, which saw Israel and four Arab countries normalize diplomatic relations.
As of 2023, special envoys are potentially subject to Senate confirmation, though the White House has managed to circumvent that law, as exhibited by the appointment of special climate envoy John Podesta. It is also unclear whether Trump plans to subject Witkoff to a confirmation process, though it is unlikely that he would encounter stiff resistance from Senate Republicans.
Witkoff was not the only Middle East diplomat whose role Trump announced on Tuesday. Trump also announced that he was appointing former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee the U.S. ambassador to Israel.
Congress
Congress must ‘adequately’ fund defense, Johnson says, amid talk of $200 billion war request
Speaker Mike Johnson said Thursday Congress has to “adequately fund defense” amid the military campaign in Iran as he declined to rule out a possible $200 billion emergency Pentagon infusion.
Johnson spoke shortly after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth refused to rule out a supplemental spending request of that size at a morning news conference. The Washington Post first reported the $200 billion figure, which Blue Light News has not independently verified.
“I’m sure it’s not a random number,” Johnson told reporters at the Capitol, saying he expected any funding request to be “detailed and specified.”
“So we’ll look at that. But obviously it’s a dangerous time in the world and we have to adequately fund defense, and we have a commitment to do that,” he added.
Republicans on Capitol Hill fear the total price tag of the war is climbing rapidly, with the war effort costing more than $1 billion a day by some accounts. But many are still in the dark about how much total funding is needed.
“I don’t know what’s going to come in yet, so everything’s up in the air,” Rep. Pete Stauber (R-Minn.) said when asked if he would support such a large funding package. “I can’t qualify any answer for you.”
Several Democrats immediately rejected the suggestion of a $200 billion funding bill out of hand, and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise declined to say if such a request could pass the House.
Asked if the request should be scaled down before coming to Capitol Hill, he said, “We will have a negotiation at some point.”
“But it hasn’t started yet,” he added. “It will happen soon.”
Congress
Thune, Tim Scott endorse Hern for open Oklahoma Senate seat
Senate Majority Leader John Thune and National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Tim Scott (R-S.C.) endorsed Rep. Kevin Hern’s bid for the open Senate seat in Oklahoma to replace Sen. Markwayne Mullin on Thursday, as Republicans look to avoid a messy primary in the red-leaning state.
Thune called Hern a “proven conservative leader” and supporter of their shared Republican agenda. “He will be a great asset in the Senate and has my full support and endorsement,” Thune said in a statement.
The seat is open after President Donald Trump tapped Mullin to replace Kristi Noem as Department of Homeland Security secretary.
Trump had previously endorsed Hern for the Senate seat in a post on Truth Social.
“A true friend of MAGA, Kevin is now running for the United States Senate, where I know he will continue to do an incredible job,” Trump wrote. “Kevin is strongly supported by the fiercest MAGA Warriors in Oklahoma, and the most Highly Respected Leaders in the United States Senate!”
Hern is running in November for a full term, but Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt will need to appoint a successor in the coming weeks to serve until then. By state law, the person who is appointed to fill the seat temporarily cannot run for the full term.
Other major Republican figures in the state — including Stitt and Rep. Stephanie Bice — have said they would not run for the Senate seat.
Congress
Mullin’s nomination to be DHS chief advances out of committee
The Senate Homeland Security Committee voted Thursday to advance Sen. Markwayne Mullin’s nomination to be the next Homeland Security secretary, after the Oklahoma lawmaker clashed with committee Chair Rand Paul in a surprisingly tense Wednesday confirmation hearing.
The vote fell mostly along party lines, with a notable vote swap. Paul, a Kentucky Republican, voted against advancing Mullin’s nomination. Paul took Mullin to task Wednesday over past disparaging comments Mullin made against him and the nature of “special missions” he claimed to have taken as a member of the House.
All but one Democrat — John Fetterman of Pennsylvania — voted against advancing Mullin’s nomination.
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