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Nevada Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen is reserving an eye-popping $14 million in fall ads for her reelection bid, an early move to shore up her standing in what will be one of the nation’s toughest battlegrounds.

The first-term Democrat’s big ad buy will start in late July and run through the election, meaning she will be on air to the tune of roughly $1 million a week on average during the campaign’s final stretch. She also released her first ads of the cycle this week.

Rosen’s early reservation is a sign of just how competitive Nevada will be up and down the ballot and comes alongside a $36 million ad reservation from Senate Majority PAC, which is aligned with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. The Silver State will once again be a crucial presidential contest, and Nevada’s House races are competitive almost every election cycle.

Stewart Boss, Rosen’s campaign manager, said she is taking advantage of a competitive GOP primary: “While her extreme Republican opponents are busy trying to out-MAGA each other, Jacky Rosen is reaching Nevada voters for the general election.”

The National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee is supporting veteran Sam Brown in the race, but he first must dispatch a crowded primary field, including former state Rep. Jim Marchant, former ambassador to Iceland Jeffrey Gunter and 2022 lieutenant governor candidate Tony Grady.

Democrats have generally had the edge in recent Nevada Senate races, but Rosen is bracing for an exceedingly tight race. The GOP took the governor’s office in 2022 and nearly knocked off Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), who won her second term by less than one percentage point.

“She’s going to need it,” said Mike Berg, a spokesperson for the NRSC, of Rosen’s ad buy. “The Nevada Senate race was moved to toss-up by the Cook Political Report yesterday because polls have consistently shown that, despite her incumbency advantage, Jacky Rosen is polling in the high thirties and low forties. That’s a dangerous spot.”

To hear Mike Johnson tell it, he’s not having much fun as speaker. He has complained about the long hours and constant travel, according to those who have recently spoken to him, and a series of escalating internal clashes have made the job a joyless slog.

At least there’s this: Many of his colleagues don’t believe he’ll be doing it much longer.

Five months after replacing the deposed Kevin McCarthy, the Louisiana Republican now finds himself acutely vulnerable to a right-wing revolt of his own after governing in conjunction with Democrats, pushing through twin bipartisan spending packages and making way for a Ukraine funding vote later this month.

He’s currently facing a lone-wolf removal campaign from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) — one that could easily grow legs if he miscalculates, insiders warn. And even if he does navigate through a rocky stretch ahead, they believe he is ill-suited to lead House Republicans into the next Congress and beyond — particularly if the GOP loses control of the House in November.

“What’s he going to say? ‘Oh, shucks, guys … I ran everything through suspension and lost the majority, and I still want to be your leader’?” one Republican member said. “That’s not going to be tolerated.”

With the House out for a two-week Easter recess, Johnson has been exploring ways to navigate the thorny issue of delivering Ukraine aid, which is overwhelmingly supported by Democrats but only about half of House Republicans, by most accounts.

Earlier this week, he floated a three-pronged plan to get Ukraine funding through the House, including structuring some of the assistance as a loan and including a reversal of President Joe Biden’s natural gas export permitting pause.

That has seemingly done little to quell the internal backlash, with Greene — Johnson’s chief antagonist — undertaking a mini media tour in recent days to slam his proposals and attack Johnson personally.

She told CNN the loan idea was a “heaping, steaming pile of bullshit” that is “insulting to the American people,” and reiterated that she would force a vote on Johnson’s removal should he move to pass Ukraine aid with Democratic support under suspension of the rules — as, we’re told, is Johnson’s current plan.

Greene went further in a Wednesday interview with Tucker Carlson: “This isn’t a Republican speaker we have right now; this is a Democrat speaker,” she said. “There is zero daylight between what Nancy Pelosi did … and what Mike Johnson is doing.”

Johnson is well aware of the threat hanging over his head, those around him say — and that he has a bunch of tricky items on his April to-do list that could further alienate various other corners of his conference, including an intra-party fight over surveillance laws.

There’s hope among the speaker’s allies, however, that the recent bipartisan spending legislation was the heavier lift with the GOP and that the rest will now more readily follow his lead. They’re also betting that Greene’s removal push, with its potential to throw the House into chaos in an election year, will prove too toxic for anyone to join her.

Others aren’t so sure. The previously quoted House Republican said Johnson miscalculated by not immediately forcing a vote on her motion for his removal right before the recess started last month. It would have “shown leadership and strength,” the member said, and “left a good number of people like me say[ing], ‘OK, this guy’s got some balls.’”

Now, the member continued, “every day that it gets kicked down the road, the chance of it happening becomes more real.”

It’s possible that a small group of Democrats could save Johnson by joining GOP loyalists in opposing a vote to oust Johnson. Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, for one, predicted as much last month, saying “a reasonable number” of Democrats would come to Johnson’s rescue under the right circumstances.

That scenario would create a trap for Johnson, however, infuriating the GOP base and prompting his critics on the right to mock him as the “Democrats’ speaker.” That, in turn, could pressure some Republicans who might not otherwise be inclined to support his removal into eventually endorsing it.

Some in the GOP say they could be more forgiving. The Republican member argued that the House is already being run as a “coalition government” because Johnson is passing most bills under suspension of the rules — a process that bypasses the House Rules Committee, where hard-liners hold effective veto power, but requires a two-thirds majority (and thus Democratic votes) on the floor.

But others insists such a situation would be untenable for Johnson.

“I can tell you this for sure: If there is a motion and Democrats jump in to support Johnson, that greatly diminishes him because then he’ll immediately become the ‘uniparty’ speaker,” said a senior House Republican aligned with Johnson. “Everything would be run on suspension because people would take down rules — or they’ll do continuous motions to vacate.”

Even if Johnson somehow manages to hold on through April, there are already whispers in House GOP circles that he won’t be long for the role of senior-most party leader much beyond that. Many Republicans privately concede that they’re unlikely to keep the House this fall. And if they don’t, there will be pressure on Johnson to step aside from leadership completely, as have GOP speakers who have lost the majority since the 1950s.

Johnson’s own groaning about the demands of the job in recent private conversations have only fueled the speculation, members say. Should there be a intraparty blowup in the coming weeks, members say, he’ll have some soul-searching to do.

Greene is hoping the moment might come ever sooner than that: “I’m planning to speak with him on Friday,” Greene told Carlson, “and I’m very much looking forward to that.”

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A Democrat locked in one of the swingiest House races in Michigan isn’t afraid to appear with the president, even as President Joe Biden faces tough approval numbers in the state.

“If the president comes to my district, just like if any president came to my district and invited me, I’ll be there. I think that’s important,” former Michigan state Sen. Curtis Hertel told Inside Congress Wednesday. “And I want to talk to him about the values and what’s important to our district. Obviously I would be happy to.”

Hertel is running to succeed Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) in a district that Biden narrowly won in 2020, but with Slotkin’s decision to run for Senate, Republicans see the Lansing-area district as one of their top pickup opportunities this year. Hertel said he is confident he can keep the seat blue, acknowledging voter frustration with both parties but pledging to be “somebody who will listen to them.”

Biden has some ground to make up in the Mitten State, with a Wall Street Journal poll out last night showing him trailing Donald Trump by 3 points. He won the state in 2020, rebuilding Democrats’ so-called blue wall of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin after Trump won all three in 2016.

Hertel indicated he wanted to focus on his own race, declining to give any advice to Biden’s campaign on turning around their poll numbers: “I’ve got to focus on my own race here. I know what’s working for us and [it’s] having conversations with voters. … And so I assume it’d work for anybody else.”

Although Democrats won’t have an abortion measure on the ballot to boost turnout like it did in 2022, Hertel believed it will still be a potent issue this election cycle. He said voters could recognize the “potential for Republicans to take control of all branches of government and [pass] a national abortion ban.”

Hertel is aggressively raising money, raking in over $1.3 million last quarter, according to fundraising numbers shared exclusively with Inside Congress, giving him more than $2 million to spend in the coming months. He’s preparing for a matchup with fellow former state Sen. Tom Barrett, a Republican who ran against Slotkin in 2022 in what was one of the nation’s most expensive races that cycle. Barrett had about $650,000 on hand at the beginning of the year.

Trump has put Michigan in the spotlight, traveling to the state Tuesday evening for a campaign appearance in Grand Rapids where he focused on immigration and the recent murder of Ruby Garcia, allegedly by an undocumented immigrant. He falsely claimed to have spoken with her family, drawing pushback from them and Democrats.

“I think in politics, we get so selfish these days, we forget that these people are people. And I just — I just find that to be wrong,” Hertel said. Asked about Trump’s immigration rhetoric, he knocked both parties for not doing more on the border and criticized Trump for helping scuttle a bipartisan border deal earlier this year.

Biden also faces the challenge of winning back Michiganders who opted to cast a protest vote in the state’s primary over his handling of the war in Gaza. More than 100,000 voters opted to vote “uncommitted” in February.

Hertel again emphasized the importance of “conversations” with voters to bring them back into the Biden fold for the general election.

“There’s a lot of pain,” he said. “I think we need to keep having conversations, and I think that conversation is the only thing that actually will solve any of this.”

Rep. Robert Aderholt still isn’t declaring whether he wants to run for the powerful Appropriations Committee chair. Instead, he’s asking his colleagues to delay the election altogether.

The GOP Steering Committee is slated to vote Tuesday on a recommendation to lead the panel. That’s expected to be Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), the only person currently running for the post. Aderholt has been weighing a bid to succeed Granger, but hasn’t formally jumped into the race.

The Alabama Republican is the most senior GOP member of the committee, next to outgoing House Appropriations Committee Chair Kay Granger (R-Texas), who announced last month that she’s giving up her gavel early, ahead of a planned retirement at the end of this term.

In a letter to House Republicans on Wednesday, Aderholt pushed his colleagues to focus on reforming a “fundamentally flawed” government funding process before choosing Granger’s successor. Aderholt, who leads the prominent Labor-HHS-Education spending panel, voted against the $1.2 trillion funding package that he helped negotiate last month. He argued that earmarks inserted by Senate Democrats would flow to illegal immigrants and facilities that provide abortion services.

“A change in the appropriations committee leadership … presents a perfect opportunity to change the process,” Aderholt wrote. “Instead of hastily selecting a new Appropriations chair, I believe that now is the time to focus on correcting the process and developing our theory of government on how we will manage our responsibilities.”

After the GOP Steering Committee meets Tuesday to recommend Granger’s successor, the pick then heads to the full Republican conference for a vote.

Cole, who serves as vice chair of the Appropriations Committee and leader of the Transportation-HUD spending panel, already has the endorsement of nearly every other senior Republican appropriator, known as the cardinals. The Oklahoma Republican will likely easily win support from Steering, which tends to favor more establishment candidates for leadership posts.

House Republicans have already sought to make significant changes to the annual appropriations process, with little success. To secure the speakership last year, Kevin McCarthy made a number of promises to his right flank on spending, and conservatives ultimately booted him from the top leadership spot, saying he had failed to uphold his end of the bargain.

A particular point of contention, both for Aderholt now and other conservatives during McCarthy’s speakership race, was congressional leaders’ tendency to pass massive government funding bundles with little to no time to review legislative text. Instead, those lawmakers demanded that both chambers pass each individual spending bill — a total of 12 pieces of legislation.

But both McCarthy’s and Speaker Mike Johnson‘s attempts to do so last year repeatedly hit walls with the right flank, resulting in multiple embarrassing defeats on the House floor due to GOP infighting.

Ultimately, Johnson successfully fought to break up the dozen annual spending bills into two packages, instead of one massive bundle, which cleared Congress late last month before lawmakers broke for a two-week recess.

But all of the bills were essentially negotiated at the same time, often behind closed doors. Conservatives still complained that text was released at the last minute, containing few Republican wins or real spending reductions, leaving little time for review before members were forced to vote. And the right flank still largely voted against both packages.

The campaign of GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert said the Colorado lawmaker went to the hospital after experiencing “severe swelling in her upper left leg” and underwent emergency surgery to remove a blood clot.

Doctors indicated the lawmaker is expected to make a full recovery following the procedure and diagnosed her with May-Thurner syndrome, a rare condition that affects blood flow.

“I’m looking forward to making a full recovery and getting back to Congress to continue fighting for Colorado,” Boebert said in a statement released by her campaign.

Boebert is in the midst of a competitive bid to win a new seat in Colorado after opting to run in the newly open eastern Colorado-based seat once held by former Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.).

Marjorie Taylor Greene isn’t backing away from her threat to hold a referendum on Mike Johnson that could boot him from the speakership. Nor have the two had much of a conservation about it — yet.

“I haven’t talked to him on the phone one time,” Greene told POLITICO Tuesday afternoon.

“He reached out to me Thursday night before Good Friday and left me a strange voicemail about how he’s traveling all over and he’s exhausted. And no matter how tired he was, he wanted to try to get on the phone with me,” the Georgia Republican said, adding that “I’m like, ‘Why do I want to talk to someone that’s so exhausted?’ That’s not good.”

Greene said Johnson texted her again earlier Tuesday explaining he had a busy schedule and that he wanted to chat Wednesday. Greene, citing her schedule, said she proposed Friday instead. The timing of their conversation still appears unclear.

It’s a chat with extremely high stakes for the House GOP majority. Greene has vowed to force a vote on ending Johnson’s speakership by seeking “privilege” for the resolution she filed on the matter last month. Once she does that, the speaker will have 48 legislative hours in which to act.

And if Greene makes her move after April 19, when Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) is set to leave office early, Johnson may be able to only lose one GOP vote if he wants to hang on to his job — assuming full attendance and no Democratic support.

A Johnson spokesperson did not immediately return a request for comment on Greene’s summary of their interactions.

One House Republican seemed to hint earlier Tuesday that he shares Greene’s frustrations with Johnson. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) posted on X asking the speaker: “What’s your mission sir?” It was a direct response to Johnson’s suggestion to Fox News on Sunday that Greene’s ouster threat was a “distraction from our mission.”

Despite Massie’s seeming public alignment with Greene, no House Republicans have publicly committed to backing her on a vote to remove Johnson. Greene, for her part, has predicted that pressure on fellow conservatives could build depending on how Johnson handles major votes that are coming up — a potential foreign aid debate, in particular.

Senior Biden health officials on Tuesday briefed congressional committees and leadership, telling them that the risk to the general public from the avian flu remains low.

The call, confirmed by two congressional aides granted anonymity to discuss the confidential briefing, comes a day after the CDC confirmed a dairy worker in Texas tested positive for H5N1 avian influenza. Officials from the FDA, CDC, Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response and U.S. Department of Agriculture largely repeated publicly available information, according to one of the congressional aides who relayed details of the briefing.

Demetre Daskalakis, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said on the call that while the health risk to the public is low, people with long exposure to infected birds or livestock may be at greater risk of infection.

It is not clear whether Congress requested the briefing or if the health agencies scheduled the session, but an official said on the call that USDA is setting up a series of standing meetings on Fridays moving forward for congressional agriculture staffers.

Genetic sequencing appears to suggest that wild birds in the Texas panhandle region infected cows, a USDA official said on the call. No human-to-human transmission of the virus has been detected.

The FDA did not comment when asked about the briefing. House and Senate leadership offices, USDA, CDC and ASPR did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

“The Committee has been closely monitoring this ongoing issue, and there isn’t a single member of the committee who hasn’t expressed concerns about this outbreak,” said Ben Goldey, majority communications director for the House Agriculture Committee. “We appreciate USDA’s ongoing coordination and regular updates and remain confident in USDA and CDC’s assertion that there is no current threat to the food supply.”

Dairy safety, prices: The USDA said on the call that high loads of the virus are being detected in milk and that it is suspected that cow-to-cow transmission may be occurring in milking facilities.

Don Prater, acting director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, confirmed the agency does not have concerns about the safety and availability of pasteurized milk products nationwide because the pasteurization process inactivates bacteria and viruses.

“We do not expect a significant impact on the price of milk and other dairy products,” Prater said on the call.

Marcia Brown and Adam Cancryn contributed to this report.

Northern Virginia Democrats slammed a new House GOP proposal to rename the Washington-area Dulles International Airport after former President Donald Trump.

At issue is a brief two-page proposal, introduced by Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (R-Pa.) on March 29 with half a dozen additional GOP co-sponsors, that would rename the facility the “Donald J. Trump International Airport.”

“Donald Trump is facing 91 felony charges. If Republicans want to name something after him, I’d suggest they find a federal prison,” Fairfax-area Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) said in a statement to POLITICO.

He wasn’t alone in the criticism. Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) recalled the day Trump enacted his executive order barring entry to individuals from certain majority-Muslim countries in 2017 — and that lawmakers went to Dulles to press for legal representation for detainees.

“I also remember Republicans like those who just introduced legislation to rename that airport after Trump hiding and giving mealy mouthed responses when asked about the chaos and suffering Trump’s bigotry caused,” he said in a statement. “They know our airport will never be named after Trump, but that’s not the point — the point is to suck up to their Dear Leader.”

Asked if he had any response to the legislation, an aide to Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) replied: “lol.”

The airport, the closest with international flights to the Capitol, is currently named for influential former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, but is routinely derided by area travelers over its customer experience.

Rep. Adrian Smith became the latest House Republican to entertain federally funding the rebuilding of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge, but he was not yet willing to commit to the idea.

“I’m willing to take a look at that but there should also be some resources privately — that should be an option as well,” the veteran Nebraska Republican said following a brief pro forma session Tuesday in Washington. “Let’s not just jump to the conclusion of that it has to be a federal answer.”

Smith is just the latest Republican to express hesitation or outright resistance toward using federal dollars to rebuild the bridge and reopen the Port of Baltimore. Maryland officials argue reopening the port, one of the nation’s busiest, and bridge will have stave off rippling economic consequences throughout the country — especially on the East Coast.

The Nebraska Republican acknowledged the potential for supply chain disruptions while the port remains shuttered.

“I also know that when it comes to our ports, we do have some redundancy that I think can be helpful,” he said. “I don’t want to take anything for granted. But I think it’s a reminder that we want to make sure things like this don’t happen again.”

Mitch McConnell plans to keep fighting his party’s “isolationist movement” — even after he steps down as GOP leader.

The Kentucky Republican, who is leading the hawkish wing’s drive to fund Ukraine, said in an interview with WHAS’s Terry Meiners that continuing to push for a brawny national security approach will be a major priority over the rest of his time in the Senate. McConnell’s term ends at the end of 2026, two years after he plans to give up his leadership post, and he said he’ll serve it out in full.

“I’m particularly involved in actually fighting back against the isolationist movement in my own party. And some in the other as well. And the symbol of that lately is: Are we going to help Ukraine or not?” McConnell said. “I’ve got this sort of on my mind for the next couple years as something I’m going to focus on.”

Asked about his divergent view with fellow Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul, who opposes foreign aid and sending more money to Ukraine to fend off Russia, McConnell said they’ve never agreed on foreign policy and that Paul “would be the first one to say that he’s an isolationist.” The bigger problem, McConnell added, is that more of his conference is agreeing with Paul’s view; roughly half the Senate Republicans voted for the foreign aid bill and its $60 billion in Ukraine funding.

That means many of his own members are now opting against sending Ukraine money.

“What’s made it more troublesome is, it seems to me, others are heading in that direction, making arguments that are easily refuted. We’re not losing any of our troops, the Ukrainians are the ones doing the fighting,” McConnell said. “If the Russians take Ukraine, some NATO country would be next and then we will be right in the middle of it.”

The Senate’s Ukraine bill faces an uncertain path in the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson said he supports additional funding but may devise his own approach. It doesn’t help that former President Donald Trump is no cheerleader for Ukraine aid, either.

McConnell offered a somewhat tepid endorsement of Trump in March but has generally steered clear of talking about the former president. He did not deviate from that approach on Monday. Asked if he’s spoken to Trump, McConnell said: “I’ve got my hands full dealing with the Senate.”

“Biden’s got problems too. Both these candidates don’t score very well with the public. One of them’s going to win. What am I going to do? I’m going to concentrate on trying to turn my job over to the next majority leader,” McConnell said.

And, of course, make sure Ukraine doesn’t go empty-handed in its defense against Russia.