What to Know in Washington: Spending Plan Hung Up Over Border
By Michaela Ross
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Plans in Congress to quickly advance a package of $45 billion in Ukraine aid in a broader spending package hours after an historic address by Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy were scuttled late Wednesday over a dispute about US border security.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) filed cloture last night on an omnibus government funding package after senators failed to secure a unanimous agreement to speed up passage. Senators will reconvene at 8 a.m. today.
Schumer in a floor speech shortly before adjournment said, “It is my expectation that we will be able to lock in an agreement on the omnibus tomorrow morning. We are very close but we’re not there yet.”
The Senate had been expected to vote on the assistance as part of a $1.7 trillion omnibus spending package late in the evening. Those plans were delayed after Democrats rejected a proposal by Republican Senator Mike Lee for an amendment extending pandemic-era asylum restrictions, known as Title 42, on the southern border of the US.
“This whole bill is hanging from a thread,” Senator Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat, said.
A Democratic aide said Lee’s amendment would get votes from some Democrats and its adoption would wreck chances for passage of the full-year funding plan because it would make the legislation toxic for Democratic progressives in the House. That, in turn, would force Congress to pass a stopgap bill to keep the government running after Dec. 23, when current funding runs out.
“Democrats are worried that it would pass” the Senate, John Thune, the chamber’s No. 2 Republican, said of Lee’s amendment. Read more
Pelosi Attack Spurs More Security for Former Speakers in Omnibus
The US Capitol Police could be charged with protecting ex-House speakers under omnibus legislation Congress could consider days before Speaker Nancy Pelosi — whose husband was attacked earlier this year — steps down from the position third-in-line to the presidency.
$15.3 Billion in Earmarks Included in Government Funding Bill
Lawmakers included 7,234 earmarks totaling $15.3 billion in the $1.7 trillion omnibus government funding package lawmakers aim to enact by Friday, with projects included for police equipment, highway infrastructure projects, and museums, among others.
Lawmakers stand to take home thousands of relatively small pots of money for local projects in the second consecutive year of a new earmarking system, revived after a decade-long ban of the practice.
Readers can download a central Excel document with all of the omnibus bill’s earmarks here, converted from 10 PDF documents published by the House Appropriations Committee. Read more
Zelenskiy Wins Applause, Aid in Half-Day Dash Through Washington
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy had just half a day in Washington, his first trip abroad since Russia invaded his country 300 days ago, and every moment had to count.
By the time news broke that he would visit the White House and address Congress before Christmas, the battle-worn leader was already on a 8,400-kilometer (5,200-mile) journey with a message that could only be delivered in person: Thank you, but please do more.
Wearing his standard military-green sweatshirt, the former television comedian deployed his wit and frankness with President Joe Biden and US lawmakers in a bid to keep their attention on a war headed into a merciless winter and unsure 2023.
Though the House is at an inflection point when it comes to backing more war aid to Ukraine, that reluctance was only palpable in the back of the chamber where Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) were sitting. They rarely stood up and spent a considerable time looking at their cellphones, Roxana Tiron reports. Read more
- Zelenskiy pressed Congress for tanks, planes and other weapons to help repel the Russian invasion, portraying the war as a battle of democracy against tyranny as he looked to win support from skeptical Republican lawmakers. He also called for more sanctions and demanded Russians responsible for the war be brought to justice. Read more
- That Zelenskiy made the visit in the first place—conducted under heavy security and incorporating a train journey to Poland to avoid flying and risk being shot down—underscores both the increasing urgency to secure more weapons and money to fund the conflict. He said he laid out to Biden a ten-point peace initiative, though he didn’t give further details. Read more
- Before his speech, Zelenskiy met with Biden at the White House where the US president assured him that the American people were with him “every step of the way,” and “we’ll stay with you for as long as it takes.” Read more
- Meanwhile, the Kremlin criticized the outcome of Zelenskiy’s visit to Washington and warned that Russia would continue to target weaponry supplied to Ukraine by the US and its allies Read more
- Everything You Need to Know About Zelenskiy’s Trip to the US
Happening on the Hill
CONGRESS’ SCHEDULE
- The House returns at 9 a.m. to debate two bills under a rule approved last night: a presidential tax return measure and a bill that would create a National Heritage Areas System, along with other bills under expedited procedure.
- The Senate meets at 8 a.m. to consider Franklin Parker to be an assistant secretary of the Navy
NYU Lawyer Approved by Senate to Lead Biden Regulation Team
The Senate confirmed Biden’s choice to lead the White House’s regulations office, positioning that team to have its first permanent leader in almost two years.
Agriculture Trade Nominees Get Last-Minute Push After Delay
The Senate by unanimous consent confirmed Biden’s nominee for Agriculture Department under secretary for trade and foreign agricultural affairs.
Top EEOC Attorney, Labor Wage Chief Nominees Blocked In Senate
A Republican senator blocked separate attempts to confirm two of Biden’s labor nominees through unanimous consent, likely delaying a final vote on the officials to sometime next year.
Republican Senators Seek to Limit Scale and Power of Fed Banks
US Senator Pat Toomey and other Republican lawmakers introduced legislation that would more than halve the number of Federal Reserve regional banks and add more political oversight to the selection process for bank presidents.
Waters Calls on FTC for Robust Review of ICE-Black Knight Deal
House Financial Services Committee Chair Maxine Waters has urged the Federal Trade Commission to conduct a robust review of Intercontinental Exchange’s proposed acquisition of Black Knight, according to her office.
Copyright Office Offers Congress Technical Measure Suggestions
The US Copyright Office published two letters to Congress, advising senators to amend a resource on online service providers and safe harbors to clarify certain terms and qualifiers for standard technical measures.
Elections, Politics & Probes
Virginia Picks McClellan For Democratic Nomination, Politico Reports
Virginia State Sen. Jennifer McClellan won the Democratic nomination to succeed late Rep. Don McEachin.
Trump Allies Shown Taking Fifth in Jan. 6 Panel Transcripts
Dozens of allies and supporters of former President Donald Trump invoked their constitutional right to not answer questions posed by the House committee investigating the 2021 assault on the US Capitol, according to transcripts released Wednesday night.
The first batch witness testimony released by the committee came after the panel delayed until Thursday publication of its final report on the assault by Trump supporters trying to thwart the certification of Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.
The committee, which has pledged to release hundreds of transcripts, interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses and collected more than 1 million pieces of communications and other evidence, some of which investigators reveal in the questions. Read more
- The House Jan. 6 committee is now sharing evidence with federal prosecutors, who for months were critical of the panel for refusing to send over witness interview transcripts and other information, a person familiar with the communications said Wednesday. Read more from Billy House and Chris Strohm.
- Stefan Passantino has taken a leave of absence from law firm Michael Best & Friedrich following an allegation that he advised a Trump White House staffer to mislead the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack. Read more
- Separately, a group of House Republicans released their long-promised counter-report to the House Select Committee. It breaks little new investigative ground, with its main finding that intelligence and law enforcement failures left the US Capitol complex vulnerable, and also partly blames Democratic leaders for security failures. Read more from Billy House.
IRS Presidential Audit Process Under Fire Amid Trump Tax Report
A dormant process and a lack of manpower to vet the monster tax return of a businessman-turned-politician raises new questions about IRS’ ability to audit presidential tax returns. Read more
- Trump’s personal and business financial losses have shielded him from paying much income tax since 2015, according to documents made public by the House Ways and Means Committee. Read more
Trump Lawyer Accused of Evading Subpoena in Giuliani Lawsuit
A lawyer who was part of Trump’s 2020 legal team may be evading a subpoena in a defamation case against Rudy Giuliani, according to attorneys for two Georgia election workers who sued the former New York City mayor.
Trump Bid to Stall NY AG’s Probe Thrown Out by Florida Judge
Trump’s attempt to use a Florida lawsuit to stall New York’s $250 million civil fraud case against him was rejected a federal judge who called some of his arguments “plainly frivolous.”
Around the Administration
PRESIDENT’S SCHEDULE
- Biden has no public events scheduled
Biden to Decide on ConocoPhillips Alaska Oil Project in February
Top Biden administration officials on Wednesday committed to issuing a decision on whether to authorize ConocoPhillips’ $8 billion Willow oil project in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska by the end of February, according to lawmakers from the state.
New Regulation Head Revesz Seen as Most Progressive Rules Czar
Richard Revesz will take over as the long-awaited head of the Biden administration’s rulemaking review office, a confirmation that gives hope for rule-watchers looking ahead to more stringent environmental standards.
SEC Charges Bankman-Fried’s Associates Ellison and Wang
US authorities have alleged that fallen crypto titan Sam Bankman-Fried defrauded investors in his FTX empire, stealing billions of dollars over years for his own benefit.
EBay, PayPal, Others Ask Yellen to Delay Tax Reporting Change
A coalition of eBay, PayPal, Etsy, and others urged Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen Thursday to delay a tax reporting change that they say will create confusion among their platform users.
Parental-Notice Birth Control Case Feared as Step to Right’s End
The war over reproductive rights is moving to a new front—access to contraceptives—with the opening salvo being fired by a Texas federal judge in a case involving a parent’s right to know when their child seeks family planning services from a federally funded provider.
With assistance from Roxana Tiron
To contact the reporter on this story: Michaela Ross in Washington at mross@bgov.com
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Brandon Lee at blee@bgov.com
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