Congress
What we’re watching: GOP leaders face debt-limit fight
đď¸ What we’re watching
- GOP leaders are staring down two bad options to solve President-elect Donald Trumpâs debt-limit problem, after failing to execute his demand to lift the federal borrowing cap in the last government funding bill, Jennifer Scholtes reports.Â
- Donald Trump has promised to deport millions on âDay One.â He wouldnât be the first president to round up undocumented immigrants en masse. For Blue Light News Magazine, Ali Bianco looks back at previous mass deportation efforts.
- Democrats and Republicans are trying to find consensus on reforms for the H-1B visa program, as MAGA world clashes over the issue.Â
đ Whatâs Trump up to?
- In a set of statements, Trump mourned the loss of former President Jimmy Carter, who died Sunday at 100. âWhile I strongly disagreed with him philosophically and politically, I also realized that he truly loved and respected our Country, and all it stands for,â Trump said on Truth Social.Â
đ¨Whatâs up with the nominees?
- If confirmed, HHS pick Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would be responsible for naming some of the people tasked with rewriting the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, one of the federal governmentâs most powerful tools to shape public perceptions about whatâs healthy â and whatâs not, Marcia Brown reports.
Congress
Comer subpoenas Attorney General Pam Bondi over Epstein files
House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) issued a subpoena to Attorney General Pam Bondi on Tuesday, demanding she testify before lawmakers over her handling of the Epstein files.
The move came after five Republicans on the committee joined their Democratic colleagues in supporting Rep. Nancy Maceâs (R-S.C.) motion to call on Bondi to testify earlier this month.
In a letter to Bondi, Comer wrote that âthe Committee has questions regarding the Department of Justiceâs handling of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and his associatesâ and its compliance with a law passed by Congress last year compelling the DOJ to release the documents.
âAs Attorney General, you are directly responsible for overseeing the Departmentâs collection, review, and determinations regarding the release of files pursuant to the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and the Committee therefore believes that you possess valuable insight into these efforts,â he wrote.
Comerâs committee has subpoenaed former President Bill Clinton and former first lady Hillary Clinton as a part of its ongoing investigation into Epstein, as well as other influential individuals named in the files.
Congress
House members to get classified briefing on expiring spy law
Trump administration officials will hold a classified briefing for House members Wednesday on the upcoming spy powers expiration, according to two people granted anonymity to announce the plans ahead of an announcement.
Speaker Mike Johnson is pushing to hold a vote on an 18-month reauthorization of the surveillance authorities known as Section 702 next week, ahead of the April 20 expiration, but he’s facing down a potential rebellion from GOP hard-liners rebellion who want changes made to the spy law and to attach an unrelated elections bill.
House GOP leaders are arguing that the national security implications of the reauthorization are more important than ever given President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran and the threats posed by the widening war in the Middle East.
The briefing is set for 3:30 p.m. Wednesday.
The 18-month extension is likely to come direct to the floor next week without action first in the House Intelligence Committee, according to two people with direct knowledge of the matter and a brief interview with panel Chair Rick Crawford (R-Ark).
“I don’t think we’ll mark it up,” Crawford said â a decision that could further exacerbate the internal tensions between party leaders and the hard-right lawmakers who oppose a clean extension.
Congress
Democrats deliver latest DHS funding offer to White House
Senate Democrats sent over their latest proposal for immigration enforcement changes at the Department of Homeland Security as a shutdown of the vast department drags into its second month.
The offer, confirmed by a White House official and two other people with knowledge of the matter, is the latest of several the two parties have traded since the funding lapse began Feb. 14. Little progress has been made since toward an agreement that would fund agencies including TSA, FEMA, ICE and the Coast Guard.
Democrats have vowed to block funding until the administration agrees to immigration enforcement changes in the wake of federal agents killing two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. Republicans, meanwhile, have rejected Democratsâ efforts to lop off immigration enforcement agencies and fund the rest of DHS.
The White House is âcurrently reviewingâ the offer, the official said. But a top GOP aide immediately cast doubt of the seriousness of the proposal.
âIt took 18 days for them to hit âCtrl Câ and âCtrl V,ââ Ryan Wrasse, a spokesperson for Majority Leader John Thune wrote on X, referring to the copy-and-paste function on a personal computer.
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