Tag

Slider

Browsing

One week into the shutdown, Republicans are trying to stay on message — but President Donald Trump is making that difficult.

Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune want to show Democrats there’s no daylight inside the GOP: Republicans will negotiate a deal to extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies only once the government is back open.

But Trump is causing major headaches by going off-script. On Monday, Trump pointed to health care negotiations with Democrats that didn’t appear to exist, but would have contradicted Johnson and Thune’s red line about no ACA talks until the shutdown ends.

On Tuesday, the White House further complicated matters by sending a memo stating some federal workers might not receive backpay after the shutdown’s over. Republicans scrambled to refute that message. After all, Trump himself signed legislation in 2019 guaranteeing all federal workers would be paid following a shutdown — and many Republicans voted for it.

“You can’t not pay them for work they’ve done,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) told POLITICO. “I don’t think [Trump] seriously would. I think he’s playing hardball the way he sometimes does: Negotiating on the one hand, flexing leverage on the other.”

Johnson and Thune have also found themselves occasionally out of sync. During a joint news conference Tuesday, the speaker said he was “certainly open” to having the House vote on emergency legislation to pay essential personnel, like military or air traffic controllers, during the shutdown. “Honestly, you don’t need that,” Thune interjected, before reinforcing that Democrats could just vote to reopen the government.

House Republicans are also freelancing their shutdown messaging back in their districts. Rep. Rob Bresnahan of Pennsylvania is rolling out new legislation to bar federal income taxes from being collected during the shutdown, per a release shared first with Inside Congress. Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona has introduced a bill that would repeal Obamacare completely. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia called on the Senate to get rid of the 60-vote threshold to reopen the government — a nonstarter for Thune.

Some rank-and-file senators are taking matters into their own hands. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), leaving the Senate floor Tuesday, said she had just talked to New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, one of the lead Democrats facilitating bipartisan conversations. And a bipartisan group was scheduled to meet over Thai food last night, including Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.).

Mullin has been tapped by the administration to serve as a conduit to Democrats amid government funding talks, according to one person close to the White House. Asked if he had been given an informal role, however, he shrugged: “I don’t have a badge.”

What else we’re watching:   

Shutdown action for the day: The Senate will vote for a sixth time on dueling stopgap funding bills at 11:20 a.m. Meanwhile, the House is out, and its leaders plan to hold press events. Speaker Mike Johnson, joined by other GOP leaders and Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.), will hold a news conference in the Rayburn Room at 10 a.m. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, joined by other Democratic leaders and the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, will host a forum at noon on health care.

War powers vote: Democratic Sens. Adam Schiff of California and Tim Kaine of Virginia will force a vote Wednesday on a resolution that would terminate the use of the U.S. Armed Forces for hostilities in the Caribbean Sea.

Government censorship hearing: The Senate Commerce committee, chaired by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), will hold a hearing Wednesday morning on how the Biden administration allegedly pressured Big Tech into censoring speech protected by the First Amendment.

Democrats on the panel plan to turn the tables on Republicans by drilling into “the censorship that happened the last few weeks” under the Trump administration, according to ranking member Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.).

Dasha Burns and Jordain Carney contributed to this report.

One week into the government shutdown, top Republican leaders appear to have lost the plot.

President Donald Trump, Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune are straining to project a united front against Democrats, just barely concealing tensions over strategy that have snowballed behind the scenes since agencies closed last week.

In one stark example, Trump scrambled the congressional leaders’ messaging Monday when he told reporters in the Oval Office he would “like to see a deal made for great health care” and that he was “talking to Democrats about it.”

Within hours, Trump walked it back: “I am happy to work with the Democrats on their Failed Healthcare Policies, or anything else, but first they must allow our Government to re-open,” he wrote on Truth Social hours after his initial comments.

Johnson said Tuesday he “spoke with the president at length yesterday” about the need to reopen agencies first, while Thune told reporters there have been “ongoing conversations” about strategy between the top Republicans.

A White House official granted anonymity to speak about the circumstances behind the president’s statements said the Truth post was “issued to make clear that the [administration] position has not changed” and was not done at the behest of the two leaders.

But tensions surfaced again Tuesday after a White House budget office memo raised questions about a federal law guaranteeing back pay for furloughed federal workers — one that Johnson and Thune both voted for in 2019.

These episodes are among many where the White House and Hill Republicans have been crosswise on strategy and seemingly not communicating in advance about their key moves. Many of those instances have concerned hardball tactics coming from White House budget director Russ Vought seemingly aimed at cornering Democrats by threatening blue-state spending and the federal workforce.

Not only have those moves so far failed to move Democrats off their positions, they have left Johnson and Thune flat-footed as they confront questions about the GOP strategy for ending the shutdown.

The two leaders, for instance, both struggled to square their own support for federal workers with the administration’s new position questioning back pay for furloughed employees. Thune sought to return focus to Democrats while also indicating frustration with the White House.

“All you have to do to prevent any federal employee from not getting paid is to open up the government,” Thune told reporters Tuesday. “I don’t know what statute they are using. My understanding is, yes, that they would get paid. I’ll find out. I haven’t heard this up until now. But again it’s a very straightforward proposition, and you guys keep chasing that narrative that they’ve got going down at the White House and up here with the Democrats.”

Johnson separately said he supported back pay and praised the “extraordinary Americans who serve the federal government.”

“They serve valiantly, and they work hard, and they serve in these various agencies, doing really important work,” he said. “I tell you, the president believes that as well.”

Barely two hours later, Trump sent a different message: “I would say it depends who we’re talking about,” he told reporters when asked about guaranteeing back pay. “For the most part, we’re going to take care of our people, but for some people they don’t deserve to be taken care of.”

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement that Trump and congressional Republicans “are all in complete lockstep and have been consistent” in saying the government must reopen before health care or any policy issues can be discussed.

“The Administration will not negotiate while the American people are being held hostage by Democrats,” she added.

As far as congressional Republicans are concerned, the politics of government shutdowns is straightforward: Isolate the Senate Democrats who are blocking a House-passed bill to reopen the government and make them own the consequences of having agencies shuttered.

“If you’re Republicans, you have to get Dems to blink first,” said a person close to the White House who was granted anonymity to describe strategic conversations.

But Trump and Vought have not followed that strategy, seemingly preoccupied with punishing their political enemies and executing an ideological agenda targeting the federal workforce and programs.

Most of the strategic tensions have pitted Johnson and Thune against the White House — but not all.

The two congressional leaders appeared together at a news conference Tuesday where they were pressed on the possibility of standalone legislation guaranteeing pay for military members or air traffic controllers.

“I’m certainly open to that,” Johnson said, before Thune — seemingly wary of taking pressure off Democrats — poured cold water on the idea.

“You don’t need that,” he interjected. “The simplest way to end it is not try to exempt this group or that group or that group. It’s to get the government open.”

In contrast to the GOP divisions, Democrats have been largely successful so far in their effort to focus attention on health care — in particular, on Affordable Care Act insurance subsidies that expire at the end of the year. They are pushing Republicans to engage now while Johnson and Thune insist the problem can be dealt with later, after the government reopens.

And they have noticed the disarray on the other side of the aisle. “I think they are absolutely struggling to figure out how they are going to get out of this,” Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said Tuesday.

The White House official said Republicans remain confident they will ultimately prevail, saying Democrats “have no viable alternative” to the House stopgap and that “it’s the party that is asking for stuff that is going to be blamed.”

But behind the scenes, the top Republican leaders agree that the subsidies have to be extended going into a midterm election year. The person close to the White House said “2026 can’t be about health care” for the GOP.

Johnson and Thune know the issue unites Democrats but divides their members and are trying to keep a lid on those internal tensions. They haven’t been especially successful. Many hard-line conservatives have staked out total opposition to any extension, while swing-district members have sketched out proposals to keep premiums from skyrocketing.

The split was underscored Monday night when Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), a Trump loyalist with a maverick streak, took direct aim at party leaders for not addressing the looming deadline.

“Not a single Republican in leadership talked to us about this or has given us a plan to help Americans deal with their health insurance premiums DOUBLING!!!” Greene wrote on X.

Johnson responded Tuesday by saying Greene simply wasn’t in the loop as other Republicans discuss a path forward.

“She’s probably not read that in on some of that, because it’s still been sort of in the silos of the people who specialize in those issues,” Johnson said.

But the open rebellion — and Trump’s public signals that he’s willing to deal — is only fueling Democrats’ willingness to hold out on government funding. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer quoted from Greene’s post on the Senate floor Tuesday.

“Hold on to your hats: I think this is the first time I’ve said this, but on this issue, Rep. Greene said it perfectly,” he said. “Rep. Greene is absolutely right.”

Some progress has been made behind the scenes toward at least establishing lines of bipartisan communication. Some rank-and-file senators are already discussing potential shutdown off-ramps involving the ACA subsidies and unfinished fiscal 2026 appropriations bills.

The person close to the White House said the administration has informally deputized Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma to serve as a conduit to Democrats. Asked about the arrangement, Mullin said, “I don’t have a badge,” and otherwise declined to discuss whether he was briefing the administration on bipartisan Senate talks.

As those discussions play out, the top leaders have been left to paper over their internal disputes with words of praise and harmony.

After Trump sent his clean-up Truth, Johnson praised the president for making “very clear that, yes, he’s happy to sit down and talk to Democrats about health care or anything as soon as they reopen the government.”

“We are 100 percent consistent and united on that,” he said. “The president is a dealmaker. He likes to figure these things out and work towards solutions, and that’s why he’s a bold, strong leader that America needs right now.”

Sophia Cai, Mia McCarthy, Jennifer Scholtes and Nicholas Wu contributed to this report.

Senate Republicans confirmed more than 100 nominees Tuesday evening, largely clearing the backlog of President Donald Trump’s picks who have been awaiting a floor vote.

The party-line vote comes after Senate Republicans changed the rules last month to allow most executive branch nominees to be confirmed as a group, whereas lawmakers previously had to hold a vote on each one. The change does not include Cabinet picks or judges.

This latest bloc represents the biggest number of nominees Republicans have cleared at once since the rules change. It includes former GOP Senate candidate Herschel Walker and Sergio Gor, ex-director of the White House Presidential Personnel Office, to be ambassadors to the Bahamas and India, respectively.

Republicans ultimately deployed the “nuclear option” — meaning a party line rules change — amid growing frustration about the slow pace of confirming Trump nominees amid widespread Democratic opposition.

Republicans briefly debated allowing Donald Trump to make recess appointments, which would let the president bypass the Senate on nominees when the Senate is not in session. So far, Republicans have held back over concerns that it would come back to bite them the next time they are in the minority.

Speaker Mike Johnson said the House could come back to pass emergency legislation to pay troops during the government shutdown. Senate Majority Leader John Thune wasn’t willing to go there.

The unusual tactical disagreement between the two top congressional leaders played out in front of cameras Tuesday on Capitol Hill as the shutdown heads into its second week.

The House has been out of session as Johnson seeks to pressure Senate Democrats to approve the GOP-led stopgap funding bill his chamber already passed. But he opened the door at a Tuesday news conference to calling members back to vote on standalone legislation paying troops, who could miss paychecks on Oct. 15, or air traffic controllers, who could miss their first checks Friday.

“I’m certainly open to that,” Johnson said. “We’ve done it in the past. We want to make sure that our troops are paid.”

But Thune — who has consistently said it’s Democrats’ responsibility to pass the seven-week House stopgap — interjected after Johnson spoke, saying, “Honestly, you don’t need that.”

“Obviously, there are certain constituencies — many of them are going to be impacted in a very negative way by what’s happened here,” Thune said. “But the simplest way to end it is not try to exempt this group or that one or that group. It’s to get the government open.”

Johnson then spoke again to say the priority should be to open the government and that Democrats could do it quickly. He added that any plan to pay members of the military would have to pass by Oct. 13 in order to process the paychecks on time.

Just weeks weeks after Sen. Adam Schiff was called a “buffoon” and a “fraud” by FBI Director Kash Patel during a Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing, the California Democrat was similarly pilloried Tuesday by Attorney General Pam Bondi.

A heated exchange between the California Democrat and the nation’s top prosecutor encapsulates the seething tensions between the lawmaker and the Trump administration years after Schiff, as a member of the House, managed Trump’s first impeachment trial.

The DOJ is now actively investigating Schiff for mortgage fraud — allegations Schiff has vehemently denied.

“As a former federal prosecutor myself, I served in a [Justice] Department that — whether it was under a Democratic or Republican President — would never use the office to go after the president’s enemies or to hide the corruption of his friends,” Schiff said during the Senate Judiciary hearing where Bondi was testifying Tuesday. “The Department has become President Trump’s personal sword and shield to go after his ever growing list of political enemies and to protect himself, his allies, and associates.”

“If you worked for me, you would’ve been fired because you were censured by Congress for lying,” Bondi told him.

And, in response to Schiff’s questions about whether the Justice Department dropped a bribery investigation into border czar Tom Homan following Trump’s 2025 inauguration, Bondi asked Schiff, “will you apologize to Donald Trump for trying to impeach him?”

Her broadsides against Schiff were notable given the senator is the current subject of a DOJ investigation, but Bondi had barbs for multiple Judiciary Committee Democrats over the course of Tuesday’s nearly five hour-long oversight hearing.

At one point, Bondi accused Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) of misrepresenting his military record; at another moment, she suggested that Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) had ties to “dark money” groups and supported legislation that would “subsidize [his] wife’s company.” Neither Blumenthal nor Whitehouse responded directly to the attacks.

She also told Sens. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) she wished they loved their home towns “as much as you hate Donald Trump,” referring to their opposition to National Guard deployment in their respective states.

Sen. Josh Hawley falsely claimed Tuesday that newly disclosed records revealed that the FBI “tapped” the phones of eight sitting U.S. senators during special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation of President Donald Trump’s bid to subvert the 2020 election.

Hawley was describing an FBI document, publicly released Monday by Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley, that referenced a “preliminary toll analysis” of nine lawmakers. Grassley underscored that the records revealed a subset of calls made and received by those lawmakers and did not reveal the content of those calls — only the time and duration.

Attorney General Pam Bondi, during her Tuesday testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, did not correct Hawley’s characterization of the records. Bondi said she had spoken with FBI Director Kash Patel “at length” about the records and could not discuss the details “for very good reason.”

It’s unclear why the FBI reviewed the phone records of the particular set of senators included on the list. Though some, like Hawley, were deeply engaged in efforts to block the certification of Joe Biden’s win in the 2020 election, others appeared less involved.

Speaker Mike Johnson sought to play down fiery criticism of his leadership from GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in comments to reporters Tuesday, after she accused top Republicans of having no plan to address the pending expiration of federal health insurance subsidies.

“Not a single Republican in leadership talked to us about this or has given us a plan to help Americans deal with their health insurance premiums DOUBLING!!!” Greene wrote on X Monday night

Johnson responded Tuesday by saying Greene simply wasn’t in the loop as other Republicans discuss a path forward on the Affordable Care Act tax credits, whose Dec. 31 expiration will cause price spikes on insurance plans made available for purchase on federal exchanges in just over three weeks.

“Congresswoman Greene does not serve on the committees of jurisdiction to deal with those specialized issues, and she’s probably not read that in on some of that, because it’s still been sort of in their silos of the people who specialize in those issues,” Johnson said in the Capitol.

He added that House Republicans would discuss the matter further when they return to Washington. Johnson kept the chamber out of session this week to pressure Senate Democrats to end the government shutdown.

Greene’s lengthy post Monday night faulting Johnson & Co. for not having a plan to address the potential spike in health insurance premiums is among the most profound cracks in GOP unity to develop so far in the week-old shutdown.

She added to her comments Tuesday morning, saying “I think the entire system is messed up” and lamenting a “list of problems that go on and on” with U.S. health care under the ACA.

Democrats are privately viewing Greene’s post with some satisfaction for undercutting the Republican leadership position to keep health care negotiations out of the government shutdown fight. Democratic leaders are pushing for a deal on the expiring subsidies as a condition of reopening government.

“Comrade MTG strikes again,” said one Democratic aide granted anonymity to describe the private conversations.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer quoted from Greene’s Monday post on the Senate floor Tuesday.

“Hold on to your hats: I think this is the first time I’ve said this, but on this issue, Rep. Greene said it perfectly,” he said. “Rep. Greene is absolutely right.”

Attorney General Pam Bondi didn’t wait for Senate Democrats to ask their own pointed questions before she went on the attack Tuesday while testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“You voted to shut the government down,” Bondi said in response to a question from Sen. Dick Durbin about the legal basis for sending National Guard troops into Chicago.

“I wish you loved Chicago as much as you hate President Trump,” Bondi said.

Though Bondi’s appearance was expected to generate intense sparring with Democrats, Durbin seemed caught off guard by the intensity of Bondi’s attack in response to a relatively mild question about the work of the department.

“I’ve been on this committee for more than 20 years. That’s the kind of testimony you expect from this administration,” Durbin said. “A simple question as to whether or not they had a legal rationale for deploying National Guard troops becomes grounds for personal attack. I think it’s a legitimate question. It’s my responsibility.”

Poised to face tough questioning from Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats about President Donald Trump’s weaponization of the Justice Department against perceived enemies, Attorney General Pam Bondi has brought a retort: Trump’s economic adviser Peter Navarro.

Bondi is testifying Tuesday at the panel’s annual oversight hearing of the DOJ, with Navarro in attendance in the Capitol Hill meeting room. A former aide in Trump’s first administration and now the president’s current trade adviser, Navarro has continued on a crusade against the Justice Department for his four-month prison sentence during the Biden administration, when he failed to comply with a subpoena from the Democratic-led committee investigating the Capitol attacks on Jan. 6, 2021.

Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) announced he had obtained documents around the FBI’s handling of the Navarro case, including a request for physical surveillance of Navarro on the day the FBI arrested him and a timeline of that surveillance. Navarro was ultimately arrested publicly in 2022 at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Grassley called the treatment “unnecessary.”

“They were playing politics with law enforcement powers, and will go down as a historic betrayal of public trust,” Bondi said of the former Biden administration. “This is the kind of conduct that shatters the American people’s faith in our law enforcement system.”

The revelations appeared designed to preempt Democratic criticism of Trump’s broad campaign to leverage the DOJ against the president’s political adversaries. The Justice Department in the Trump administration has opened investigations into Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) — who, as a member of the House, managed Trump’s first impeachment trial — and New York Attorney General Letitia James — who had pursued a civil lawsuit against the Trump organization.

Last month, former FBI Director James Comey was charged with obstruction and lying to Congress.

Schiff, a now member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, will question Bondi later Tueday.

Grassley also continued to decry what he believed was an “unconstitutional breach:” the FBI’s decision under former President Joe Biden to request telephone records for Republican members of Congress as part of the investigation into Trump’s efforts to subvert the results of the 2020 election. Republican senators announced this new information Monday, arguing it constituted an unjustified weaponization of law enforcement against the GOP.

The judiciary panel includes several lawmakers who were targets of that FBI probe, which was narrowly tailored around the date of the certification of the 2020 election results and the subsequent attack on the U.S. Capitol. The FBI did not obtain the content of their calls.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this report misspelled New York Attorney General Letitia James’ name.

President Donald Trump and Democrats spent Monday afternoon giving reporters conflicting messages about whether they were talking to each other about the health care impasse at the center of the shutdown.

Long story short: They’re not.

But Trump’s suggestion that he was speaking with Democrats about their health care demands raised the possibility that an off-ramp might be in distant sight.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who has been engaged in bipartisan discussions with senators, said Monday that Trump’s comments were “helpful” because “the president saying this is something that we need to address is important.”

But GOP leaders are sticking to their strategy: No talks until the government reopens. Senate Majority Leader John Thune plans to keep pressure up by forcing daily votes on the House-passed CR, while Speaker Mike Johnson doesn’t plan on bringing the House back until the Senate acts.

Out of nowhere, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene added new pressure to GOP leaders Monday, calling them out for not prioritizing the expiration of ACA subsidies.

“Not a single Republican in leadership talked to us about this or has given us a plan to help Americans deal with their health insurance premiums DOUBLING!!!” the Georgia Republican said in an X post that rocketed around Capitol Hill group chats.

One other thing the White House is eyeing to force movement is Trump’s threat to move ahead any day now with mass firings of federal workers.

But Democrats are largely unfazed — buoyed by encouraging early polling and the support of federal worker unions, which are already suing to block the move.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters Monday night that blame for the layoffs “falls on Donald Trump’s shoulders … and the American people know that.”

What else we’re watching:   

What’s next in the funding fight: The Senate is expected to take its sixth vote Tuesday on dueling partisan stopgap funding bills. Meanwhile in the House, Johnson will host a news conference at 10 a.m., and Democratic leaders will meet at 6 p.m.

— Bondi heads to the Hill: Attorney General Pam Bondi will testify in front of Senate Judiciary at 9 a.m. Expect questions on everything from the Jeffrey Epstein files to an FBI probe that captured phone data belonging to GOP members of Congress as part of the investigation into Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

— Two years since Oct. 7 attack: Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) will host a 2 p.m. news conference announcing new legislation on the second anniversary of Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. He’ll be joined by other members of Congress at the House Triangle.

Jordain Carney and Nicholas Wu contributed to this report.