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Congressional leaders’ stopgap spending measure is about to face a common impediment to their bipartisan plans: a trio of conservatives on the Rules Committee.

The panel is aiming to tee up a three-month funding patch Monday afternoon, a step typically needed to send legislation to the full House for a passage vote. But conservatives on the panel — Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Chip Roy (R-Texas) and Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) — have been unwilling to rubber-stamp leadership’s wishes several times throughout the current Congress and have often spoken forcefully against so-called continuing resolutions.

A shutdown deadline looms on Sept. 30, so if conservatives and all Democrats on the Rules panel all vote against the package, House leadership will have to greenlight a House vote outside of normal rules. Speaker Mike Johnson has indicated he is not going to allow a shutdown so close to the election.

Lawmakers are expecting a mid-week vote on the short-term legislation that would fund the federal government through Dec. 20, postponing the broader funding fight until after the November election. The bipartisan plan is widely expected to clear both the House and Senate, though there could be turbulence in each chamber.

“When [congressional leaders] cut that deal, it isn’t doing anything good for the American people because you keep spending like crazy,” Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), a vocal conservative, said Monday on “The War Room” on Real America’s Voice. “That’s where people like me say, ‘When are you going to tackle it?’”

House Republicans unveiled the largely “clean” 49-page funding patch on Sunday afternoon, which they touted as a bipartisan compromise. The measure includes an additional $231 million to the Secret Service for carrying out protective operations, following two recent assassination attempts against former President Donald Trump.

The conservatives last week allowed a six-month continuing resolution through the panel, though that one had an attached provision requiring proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections. Roy and Norman ultimately backed it on the floor, while Massie voted present.

Fourteen House Republicans ultimately opposed that Johnson-led approach on the floor.

A government shutdown next week is unlikely, even if conservatives defeat procedural votes in committee or on the floor. House Republican leaders could pivot to a procedure that would fast-track debate; that sets up a two-thirds bar for passage, a threshold GOP leaders should be able to meet with Democratic votes.

The Justice Department is detailing its work to help secure the November election amid concerns on Capitol Hill about potential threats.

Assistant Attorney General Carlos Uriarte on Friday sent a previously unreported letter to the heads of five Senate committees, who had raised concerns earlier this month about a range of election threats. The letter outlined the DOJ and FBI’s work on three fronts: the right to vote, foreign threats and threats of domestic violence.

“The mission of the Department of Justice is to uphold the rule of law, keep our country safe, and protect civil rights. Defending our democracy is critical to each of these three priorities … [which] are essential to the functioning of our democracy and to maintaining the confidence of all Americans in our democratic system of government,” Uriarte wrote in the letter.

The letter — a copy of which was obtained by POLITICO — was sent to Rules and Administration Chair Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Intelligence Chair Mark Warner (D-Va.), Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Appropriations Chair Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Chair Gary Peters (D-Mich.).

The five senators sent a letter to the Justice Department and other agencies within the intelligence community earlier this month to “express concerns” about potential threats to the election and urge the administration to “prioritize preparations to detect, prevent, and mitigate threats against election systems, officials, and workers.”

Senators will also get an all-member briefing Wednesday afternoon on foreign threats to U.S. elections, according to a Senate source familiar with the plan.

Lawmakers have increasingly raised concerns about attempts to meddle in or threats to the November election, with concerns about the potential for violence growing in the wake of the two assassination attempts against former President Donald Trump.

Uriarte, in his letter, referenced the two incidents and plots by foreign actors to assassinate current or former U.S. officials in recent years, as well as the Jan. 6 attack at the Capitol.

“The Department deploys every tool at its disposal to combat such violence and threats of violence,” Uriarte added.

Lawmakers are set for their final sprint before the November elections. Congress’ main order of business: muscling through a 49-page short-term government funding patch through Dec. 20 to keep the lights on throughout the federal government.

House Republicans unveiled their bipartisan, largely clean compromise effort on Sunday afternoon (Our team has all the details.) and the Rules Committee meets Monday at 4 p.m. to tee up the measure for floor debate. A vote on the floor is expected mid-week.

One thing to watch: How the three hard-line conservatives on the Rules panel — Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Chip Roy (R-Texas) and Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) — approach the measure. Leadership could always try to pass the spending patch under suspension of the rules — an expedited process requiring two-thirds support for passage — though that would likely require Democrats to provide a hefty portion of the final votes.

Fourteen conservatives opposed a six-month funding patch last week that included a GOP provision supported by former President Donald Trump requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. And members of that group are sure to be displeased about the latest proposal from Speaker Mike Johnson.

But congressional Democrats indicated Sunday they’ll support it, once again likely providing the votes to get it across the finish line in the Republican-led House.

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer bemoaned in a Sunday statement that “this same agreement could have been done two weeks ago” but expressed hope “we can wrap up work on the [continuing resolution] this week” before the end-of-September deadline.

Any one senator can, of course, slow the chamber’s activities. But remember, lawmakers are anxious to return to the campaign trail as Election Day nears.

As for the rest of the business at hand: Senators will take a vote on a United States Tax Court judge at 5:30 p.m., while the House intends to churn through more than three dozen bills on suspension.

Sen. John Fetterman said he supports Israel’s recent pager attack on Hezbollah, adding that “if anything,” he loves it.

“I want to be very clear, I thought what Israel chose to do about blowing up the pagers and walkie talkies and after targeting and eliminating membership and leadership of Hezbollah, I absolutely support that,” Fetterman (D-Pa.) said. “In fact, if anything, I love it.”

Israel detonated Hezbollah walkie talkies and pagers last week in remote attacks that killed at least 32 people and injured more than 3,000. Hezbollah on Sunday launched dozens of rockets at an Israeli airbase. U.S. officials said the pager attacks were likely to escalate tensions — and could even cause an all-out war.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been a strong critic of Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the war in Gaza, recently said of the attacks on the Senate floor that Netanyahu was sabotaging a cease-fire deal with the pager attack.

“Every time a deal appears close Netanyahu moves the goalposts, introducing new demands and torpedoing the deal,” Sanders (I-Vt.) said in a clip played for Fetterman. “It is clear to me that Netanyahu is prolonging the war in order to cling to power.”

When asked if he agreed with anything the Vermont senator said in the clip, Fetterman said, “No, not at all.”

“Israel demonstrated that they will not allow terrorists not to be held accountable,” Fetterman said. “And I fully support that and it’s not about nothing like what my colleague has said.”

Fetterman, a strong pro-Israel Democrat, has been one of the most vocal Israel defenders since the attacks last Oct. 7. He has slammed ceasefire protesters and has split with factions from his party over the issue, often going viral for doing so. The stance has caused criticism from other Democrats — and has led to a departure of staff from his Senate office.

“I would be the last man standing to be absolutely there on the Israeli side on this with no conditions,” Fetterman once said in an interview with POLITICO. “Without destroying Hamas, there will be no enduring peace and a stable, two-state solution.”

In 2007, after one of the biggest scandals in K Street history, Congress cracked down on lobbyists’ ability to wine and dine lawmakers and aides with a host of reforms — including limits on extravagant, all-expenses-paid trips.

In the nearly two decades since, the influence industry has blown a hole through those rules, according to a new analysis of House travel disclosure data by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at the University of Maryland in partnership with POLITICO. U.S. representatives and their staff have taken at least 17,000 trips since 2012 that were paid for by private parties, many of them nonprofits with deep ties to lobbyists and special interests.

Leading the way is the nonprofit Congressional Institute: Between 2012 and 2023, Capitol Hill staff members and one lawmaker took more than 4,200 trips on the institute’s dime. Run by veteran Republican staffers, the institute is funded by $3 million in annual dues from private interest groups such as Business Roundtable and the American Hospital Association. The overwhelming majority of the trips were taken by GOP staff, according to the data, which found just one example of a Democrat attendee.

Congressional travel rules generally bar lobbyists from playing a significant role in organizing or participating in trips sponsored by corporate entities. Such free trips are limited to no more than one day, with few exceptions.

None of these restrictions, however, applies to nonprofits such as the Congressional Institute, which regularly arranges multiday trips to luxury hotels and resorts along the mid-Atlantic coast. Guests mingle with private-sector institute members who pay as much as $27,500 annually for access to the invite-only retreats. And there is nothing preventing lobbyists and industry officials from participating as speakers or attendees at the events.

“It absolutely emulates money laundering,” said Anna Massoglia, editorial and investigations manager at OpenSecrets, a nonpartisan research organization that tracks money in politics. Not only is it legal, she said, it makes it difficult to regulate gifts and travel for members of Congress: “It provides a way to really get around the intent of the law.”

Of the institute’s dozen board members, 11 are current or former federal lobbyists who have worked for some of Washington’s top lobbying firms such as the Duberstein Group, Bockorny Group and H&M Strategies. Among them, only Michael Sommers, president and CEO at American Petroleum Institute, is not registered as a lobbyist, according to disclosure forms, though API spent over $6.1 million on lobbying in 2023 alone.

Board members’ recent clients include major economic players on the Fortune 500 list, including Exxon Mobil, Toyota, JPMorgan Chase and Meta (formerly Facebook).

In February, the Congressional Institute hosted its annual conference for House legislative and communications directors at the Hyatt Regency Chesapeake Bay Golf Resort, Spa and Marina in Cambridge, Maryland. There, executives from Microsoft, Google and Meta led a panel about artificial intelligence “opportunities, pitfalls and unknowns.”

Attendees had the chance to rub shoulders with senior staff, including from the office of House Speaker Mike Johnson and the House Financial Services Committee, according to an itinerary contained in a House travel disclosure form. That’s the committee responsible for oversight of an industry facing a torrent of calls for regulation by members of both parties. For instance, about a week prior to the February retreat, Democratic members on the committee sent a letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg demanding answers about his crypto-related endeavors.

In total, 11 lobbyists addressed top House aides during the retreat. The Howard Center reached out to nine House staffers who took that trip or others sponsored by the Congressional Institute. They declined to comment or did not respond.

“What’s important to understand is that they are doing this in a social setting, so [lobbyists and staffers] become friends. It’s not just lobbyists going into the office,” said Bruce Freed, president of the Center for Political Accountability, a nonpartisan nonprofit that tracks corporate political spending.

Among those in Cambridge were Ben Nyce, deputy policy director to the House Republican Conference, and Hannah Morrow, then the legislative director for Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla).

In their disclosure reports, Nyce cited the meeting as an opportunity to “strengthen professional relationships,” and Morrow said she attended “for leadership training and policy sessions that will enhance my work to achieve my boss’s policy goals.”

The Congressional Institute paid about $1,882 for Morrow and her husband’s lodging, meals and room rental, and $1,127 for Nyce, their reports say.

Kelle Strickland, president and CEO of the Congressional Institute, defended the role lobbyists play in the organization. “Many of the professionals that work downtown in D.C. are former Hill staff, and they provide an incredible insight to the changing needs of Congress at the member level and at the staff level,’’ she said.

Strickland joined the organization last year after two decades working in the House. Most recently she was legal counsel for the chair of the House Ethics Committee, the body in charge of approving gift travel.

In addition to travel disclosures, nonprofit tax records and lobbying registrations, the Howard Center used data collected by OpenSecrets, a nonpartisan government watchdog organization, and by LegiStorm, a public affairs information platform, to document the extensive links between lobbyists and travel sponsors.

With one exception, the Congressional Institute trips were for staff travel — often to what it bills as “family-friendly” conferences for top aides such as chiefs of staff, communications directors and legislative directors. Many trips appear aimed at putting issue experts and current and former committee experts before current Hill staff. A number of the experts are former staffers who’ve become lobbyists.

An itinerary for a June 2022 conference in Williamsburg, Virginia, lists Ralph Hellmann as a panel participant offering insights on how to get bills passed. Hellmann, an institute board member, was listed as a one-time policy director to former Republican House Speaker Dennis Hastert. He has since worked as a lobbyist for the Information Technology Industry Council and for “many of the nation’s largest corporations and trade groups.” Hellmann did not return a request for comment.

From 2012 to 2023, at least three-quarters of the institute’s board members were registered lobbyists while serving on the board, according to tax and lobbying records. In fiscal year 2023, 86% of the institute’s revenue came from membership dues, and more than half of expenses were for hosting congressional trips.

The Congressional Institute is not an outlier. Nine of the top 10 sponsors of privately funded congressional travel throughout the last decade have had current or former registered lobbyists on their boards or in leadership, the Howard Center found.

The rules requiring lobbyists to be hands-off in travel are “not really worth the paper they’re written on,” said Meredith McGehee, an independent expert in government ethics and money in politics who called the trips “kind of the norm.”

“The reality has been that with a little good lawyering and not much originality, you can pretty much get around these rules to do whatever you want,” she said.

The Congressional Institute was incorporated as a nonprofit in 1987 to hold educational conferences that, according to its website, provide “space for Members and staff to discuss legislative priorities and strategies as well as develop professional relationships with each other and experts in their fields.”

Lobbyists have been part of the Congressional Institute from the beginning. Kenneth Duberstein, founder of the Duberstein Group lobbying firm and former chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan, was the Congressional Institute’s founding board chair.

Congressional Institute officials declined to disclose who its members are and whether membership has increased in recent years. Lisa Camooso Miller, the institute’s media spokesperson, confirmed “a representative of dues-paying partners are invited to attend the conferences” for House members and staffers. “Private sector partners pay their own room, food and other conference expenses,” she added.

Some past and current clients of lobbyists and institute board members David Bockorny, Anne Bradbury and Dan Meyer, have made yearly contributions of $27,500 to the Congressional Institute. They include Business Roundtable, an association of CEOs, from 2020 to 2022 and the American Hospital Association from 2019 to 2021. Business Roundtable and the American Hospital Association declined to comment.

The organization also sponsors conferences for lawmakers themselves, most notably the annual House Republican retreat that took place at The Greenbrier luxury resort in West Virginia in March. However, it does not cover the members’ travel or lodging.

While the Congressional Institute is the leader in underwriting trips for legislative staff, there are many other active players.

The American Israel Education Foundation, AIPAC’s charity organization, sponsored over 800 congressional trips — primarily for House members — from 2012 through 2023, according to the Howard Center analysis. This makes it the second-largest sponsor of private travel for the House.

Another regular sponsor is the Louisiana Sugar Cane Foundation, which has sponsored about a third of House staffers’ visits to sugar-growing regions. Industry insiders tied to the American Sugar Cane League formed the foundation after the 2007 ethics reforms. More broadly, sugar interests sponsored more congressional travel than any other branch of the agribusiness sector between 2012 and 2023.

In the world of technology, the Consumer Technology Association, a tech trade association and registered lobbying organization, flies dozens of congressional staffers every January to Las Vegas for the glitzy Consumer Electronics Show.

Onsite, representatives from CTA member companies such as Microsoft, Amazon and Meta have the opportunity to discuss the laws they’d like to see passed. These officials often are not registered lobbyists, but their goal is to persuade Congress to approve legislation that benefits the tech industry.

Craig Holman, a public interest lobbyist at Public Citizen, said Congress will impose rules on itself only if the public clamors for change.

The Honest Leadership and Open Government Act, the last major overhaul of lobbying rules, was passed only in 2007 after Jack Abramoff, a high-profile lobbyist, was convicted on charges involving corruption, conspiracy, tax evasion and fraud. Among other things, Abramoff admitted providing trips to lawmakers in exchange for their support of his clients’ interests.

“Members of Congress won’t start regulating themselves if it’s just left up to them,” said Holman, who worked with lawmakers to draft the overhaul. “They will start coming out with these regulations when the public gets involved. And the public gets involved only on the heels of scandal.”

Adriana Navarro, Caley Fox Shannon, and Taylor Nichols are reporters for the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at the University of Maryland. Heidi Przybyla is a national investigative correspondent for POLITICO.

Controversial tech magnate Elon Musk stepped up his political giving in August, giving his largest-known political donation ever to boost House Republicans’ efforts to preserve their vulnerable majority.

The National Republican Congressional Committee reported receiving $289,100 from Musk in August, according to its report filed with the Federal Election Commission Friday. The money came through a joint fundraising committee linked to Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), the filing indicated, and most of it was earmarked for the NRCC’s convention and headquarters accounts, as is typical for donations of that amount.

Musk — the richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of over $250 billion — has given to both Democrats and Republicans in the past, but not in such significant amounts.

Musk has amped up his political involvement in recent months. He has forged a relationship with former President Donald Trump, whom he is assisting by bankrolling America PAC, a pro-Trump outside group. The organization, which has undergone a leadership shuffle in recent months, is expected to play a major role in helping to turn out voters for the former president and recently began spending in competitive House races across the country as well.

It is likely that Musk has given more to America PAC than the NRCC. The super PAC, which can accept unlimited amounts from individual donors, is due to disclose its financial activity for the third quarter of this year on Oct. 15, which will give a clearer picture of how much Musk has given to the group.

And in another indication of his stepped-up political involvement, Musk has hired a political gatekeeper, longtime Republican operative Chris Young. Young’s hiring was first reported by The New York Times.

How much money Musk ends up investing in the election remains an open question. In July, the Wall Street Journal reported that he planned to donate around $45 million a month to help Trump. Musk, however, later denied the report.

Despite the influx of cash from Musk, the NRCC raised just $9.7 million in August, compared to $22.2 million raised by its Democratic counterpart.

Congressional leaders are closing in on a deal to avoid a potential government shutdown on Oct. 1, even as Speaker Mike Johnson holds off on publicly blessing the plan.

The forthcoming bill, known as a continuing resolution, is expected to fund the government until mid-December and will not include Republicans’ proposal to require proof of citizenship in order to register to vote. Though talks are continuing, negotiators are hoping to have text finalized this weekend and plan to hold a House vote early next week — a timeline first reported by POLITICO.

“We’re still finalizing some details. … We want to keep it very narrow. And so, hopefully, in the next few days we get it worked out. It’s not there yet, but we’re getting there,” Majority Leadersc Steve Scalise (R-La.) told reporters on Friday.

On partisan funding bills, Johnson can only lose a few of his own members and get legislation through the House. But the expected spending deal will likely have buy-in from Democrats, meaning it could clear the chamber even if dozens of Republicans oppose it.

Still, the deal isn’t finalized just yet.

Negotiators are looking at two potential end dates for the bill, which both parties are actively helping draft: Dec. 13 or Dec. 20. It’s also expected to include some assistance for a recent spate of natural disasters, though the exact number is still being haggled over.

Another point of contention is whether extra Secret Service funding will be included. Senate appropriators are in talks with the agency about what resources it needs, but using the stopgap bill to give the agency new funding sparked some pushback among Republicans on both sides of the Capitol. Lawmakers are also looking at giving the agency more spending flexibility.

“We’re going to try and keep everything clean. So it’s going to be as minimal as possible,” Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said. “We just want to get something that keeps the government functioning and doesn’t cause anybody any problems and lets the election play out.”

Even as spending negotiators are increasingly telegraphing that the House will embrace a stopgap bill in December, Johnson hasn’t yet publicly embraced that plan. Meanwhile, Trump has demanded that Republicans shut down the government without their immigrant voting bill.

“We’ll release the bill text as soon as we get all the final decisions made, but we haven’t made those decisions yet,” Johnson said on Friday.

Jennifer Scholtes contributed to this report.

The House on Friday passed legislation to strengthen security for presidential nominees in the wake of two assassination attempts against former President Donald Trump.

The House voted 405-0 on the bill, which requires the director of the Secret Service to apply the same standards when determining the number of agents who protect the president, vice president and major-party presidential and vice presidential candidates.

The legislation, from Reps. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) and Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.), was rolled out in the immediate aftermath of the July 13 shooting at Trump’s rally in Pennsylvania.

But House GOP leadership decided to bring it to the floor this week after Sunday’s apparent second assassination attempt in Florida revived security concerns.

The Secret Service told a bipartisan House task force investigating the July 13 attempt that President Joe Biden had ordered an increase in security for Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris in the wake of the Pennsylvania attack. Biden, according to lawmakers on the committee, ordered a level of Secret Service protection that would be “commensurate” with the level the president receives. That level of protection was in place on Sunday in Florida, the Secret Service told the committee.

But the House bill would change the level of security for presidential nominees going forward — not just for Harris and Trump.

The Secret Service has been at the heart of Congress’ investigations into the attacks against Trump, as lawmakers probe the agency’s security planning. The task force that is currently investigating the July 13 attack is expected to be formally expanded by the House to include Sunday’s incident in Florida.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are debating whether or not to include more Secret Service funding in a government spending bill they need to pass by month’s end in order to avoid a shutdown. Senators tasked with overseeing the agency’s funding have been in talks with the Secret Service about its resource needs in the wake of the July 13 shooting.

But there’s skepticism among Republicans in both chambers that more money is what the agency needs amid multiple ongoing investigations about the two apparent assassination attempts.

Instead of giving the agency more money on the short-term government funding bill, Congress could give the agency more spending flexibility, according to appropriators, then tackle the issue of further funding at the end of the year.

The House is set to vote Friday morning on a bill that would give major presidential and vice presidential candidates the same level of Secret Service protection as the president following two assassination attempts on former President Donald Trump in recent months.

The measure was introduced after the first attempt on Trump’s life at a Pennsylvania campaign rally by New York Reps. Mike Lawler (R) and Ritchie Torres (D).

The legislation requires support from two-thirds of the chamber for passage because it is being brought up under an expedited process.

This week, Speaker Mike Johnson said that the bipartisan task force created after the Butler shooting to investigate security failures will expand its scope to include the apparent attempt to assassinate Trump at his golf property in West Palm Beach, Florida on Sunday.

CR watch: With the Sept. 30 shutdown deadline approaching, House appropriators are eyeing a stopgap bill that would expire on Dec. 13 along with some additional funding for disaster aid, veterans health care and the Secret Service. (POLITICO’s Congress team has plenty more details on how lawmakers could get to that stopgap measure.) But as far as a finalized plan is concerned, things are still fluid.

“Next week we’ll need to act. It could be early next week, but I have no basis to say that other than maybe it’s more hope than anything. But I’m not booking a cruise,” appropriator Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.) said Thursday. “It’s all speculative right now.”

The congressional task force investigating the first assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump scheduled its first hearing for next Thursday, ostensibly focused on failures related to the “Secret Service’s Reliance on State and Local Law Enforcement.”

The panel has requested reams of documents and interviews as it ramps up its probe into the July attack on Trump, though it hasn’t yet announce witnesses for next week’s hearing. The task force has a mid-December deadline for issuing a report and legislative recommendations based on its findings.

The bipartisan task force was created by a vote of the full House with a limited purview on the July 13 assassination attempt, but the House is expected to soon act to expand the panel’s authority to include last weekend’s apparent attempt on Trump’s life. Its lawmakers were briefed Wednesday by the Secret Service after the latest incident and members praised its handling of the latest incident.