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Republicans are preparing to change the Senate rules to confirm most of President Donald Trump’s nominees a lot faster.

GOP senators huddled behind closed doors Wednesday to talk through proposals for a party-line overhaul of how presidential nominations are handled — the first time they’ve been able to meet in person since frustration about the slow pace of confirmations boiled over earlier this summer.

Republicans are coalescing around a plan to allow multiple nominees to be confirmed with one vote instead of votes on each individual nomination. And they intend to move fast: Senators expect the plan to be enacted before a weeklong break currently scheduled to start on Sept. 22.

The change would not apply to Cabinet-level nominees or picks for the Supreme Court and courts of appeals, senators said. Republicans are discussing whether to include nominees to federal district courts but haven’t yet reached a final consensus as they work to refine the proposal.

“The consensus is … arriving around the idea of being able to confirm multiple nominees at the same time,” Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the No. 2 GOP leader, said after the meeting.

Republicans are projecting confidence that they will be able to invoke the “nuclear option” in Senate parlance — that is, change the rules with a simple majority vote along party lines. But party leaders need to ensure the votes are locked down as they work through the fine details.

Three GOP senators could break ranks and still let Vice President JD Vance break a tie. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) has already said he doesn’t support going nuclear.

It’s just the latest change over the past decade to the Senate’s rules on nominations. Democrats, under then-Majority Leader Harry Reid, got rid of the 60-vote threshold for most nominations, and Republicans subsequently got rid of the same threshold for the Supreme Court.

Republicans also changed the rules during the first Trump administration to cut down on the amount of debate time required for most executive nominees as well as district court judges.

They’re also leaving the door open to allowing recess appointments, which would let the president bypass the Senate altogether, at least temporarily. But that idea is sparking unease in some corners of the conference, and some Republicans argue that a permanent rules change that would also apply to future administrations is the better option.

Even as Republicans move toward overhauling confirmation procedures, GOP senators reiterated this week that there is no appetite within the conference to get rid of the “blue slip” tradition, which allows senators to block district court and Justice Department nominees in their home states. Some Republicans said they’ve reached out to Democrats to see if there’s any appetite for bipartisan rules changes, but GOP senators anticipate they will need to act along party lines.

Democrats have defended their slow-walking of Trump’s nominees with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer saying last week that “historically bad nominees deserve a historic level of scrutiny by Senate Democrats.”

House members voted largely along party lines Wednesday to formally establish a new panel to investigate the events around the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol.

It’s the latest chapter in the Republican effort to rewrite the history of the events at the Capitol on that day, when a violent mob stormed the building as lawmakers attempted to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election in favor of Joe Biden over Donald Trump.

House Democrats ran their own Jan. 6 committee when they held the majority, where they held public hearings and released a report detailing Trump’s efforts to circumvent the election results and his failure to stop his supporters from taking over the complex.

This new, GOP-led select subcommittee will fall under the purview of the House Judiciary Committee and be chaired by Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), who will in his new role have unilateral authority to issue subpoenas. He plans to use his gavel to review security and intelligence failures around the attacks; many GOP lawmakers have blamed then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for allowing the Capitol to be breached in the first place and have in general downplayed the significance of the event.

Loudermilk will preside over a group of eight lawmakers to be appointed by Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.); Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) will be able to consult on at most three of those members. In an interview, Loudermilk said he was sending Johnson his picks, and while the list had not yet been finalized, he pointed to Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) as a potential selection.

Nehls is a former sheriff who helped Capitol Police stave off rioters who tried break onto the House floor during the siege. Then-House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) had initially made Nehls one of his picks to sit on the Democratic-led Jan. 6 committee, but withdrew GOP participation after Pelosi refused to seat his other selections, including the current Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio).

Asked how the previous Jan. 6 committee will inform the new panel’s work, Loudermilk said the goal was to create a report that more accurately reflected the events at the Capitol that day.

“The evidence is irrefutable that there was more politics than there was truth in that,” he said of the previous panel’s findings. “What we saw in the initial investigation, there was a lot more politics involved in decision-making than there ever should’ve been.”

Loudermilk will be required to produce a final report of the subcommittee’s finding by the end of 2026.

Some House Republicans joined every Democrat in voting to sink an effort to censure Rep. LaMonica McIver over her involvement in a chaotic May scuffle outside an immigration detention center.

Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) forced the vote to formally reprimand McIver and remove her from her position on the House Homeland Security Committee, a handful of his GOP colleagues had little appetite for moving forward with the punishment.

Five Republicans — Reps. Don Bacon and Mike Flood of Nebraska, Dave Joyce and Mike Turner of Ohio and David Valadao of California — joined every Democrat in voting to table the measure, while two Republicans — Reps. Andrew Garbarino of New York and Nathaniel Moran of Texas — voted present.

“I think it’s best to let Ethics Committee finish its report,” Bacon said.

A spokesperson for Turner said after the vote the Ohio Republican inadvertently voted to kill McIver’s censure; the incorrect vote did not change the outcome.

Several Democratic officials, including McIver and Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman and Rob Menendez, were attempting to conduct an oversight visit of the Newark, New Jersey, facility when federal agents arrested the city’s mayor.

Federal prosecutors abandoned a charge against the mayor, but acting U.S. Attorney Alina Habba then charged McIver with offenses that come with a maximum sentence of 17 years in prison. Habba accused McIver of slamming a federal agent with her forearm, “forcibly” grabbing him and using her forearms to strike another agent.

McIver denied wrongdoing, with her lawyers explaining that an “unnecessary, reckless, and disproportionate escalation” by federal agents led to “chaos and a serious scuffle involving a great deal of physical contact.”

The McIver censure resolution prompted Democrats to threaten retaliation, with some members introducing a measure earlier Wednesday to censure Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) over a litany of ethics allegations. Censure resolution and other discipline-related matters can be fast-tracked to a House vote, but it’s not clear whether Democrats will now withdraw the Mills resolution now that the McIver censure failed.

“I’m going to have some conversations with my colleagues, with Ms. McIver in particular, and some of our leadership, and we’ll make that determination,” said Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), who introduced the Mills resolution.

Ry Rivard and Meredith Lee Hill contributed to this report.

The House approved a symbolic measure that would affirm the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s investigation into the handling of case against convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The measure, included in a House rule that cleared in 212-208 vote, has no practical implications, as the Oversight panel is free to continue its probe without any further action on the floor. However, the House GOP leadership has been touting the investigation as a better alternative to Republican Rep. Thomas Massie’s controversial legislation that would compel the release of materials in the Epstein case in 30 days.

Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), his chief co-sponsor, have been building support for a discharge petition that would compel a floor vote on their measure. The duo need two more Republican votes, if all Democrats sign on as expected, to force the vote.

Entering the House floor just before the vote, Speaker Mike Johnson insisted again to reporters that the Oversight provision in the rule would bear fruit.

Johnson also reiterated his opposition to Massie’s discharge petition, even as some victims have said they support Massie’s effort.

“I don’t begrudge anything that the victims have said. … It’s a heroic thing that they’re doing,” Johnson said. “But there are hundreds and hundreds of other women, some of them recruited and groomed as minors, as young as 13 years old, who do not want their identities to be known.”

Meredith Lee Hill contributed to this report.

Rep. Thomas Massie is publicly pleading with his Republican colleagues to break rank with House GOP leaders and join his crusade to force a vote on the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.

At a Wednesday press conference outside the Capitol alongside some of the late convicted sex offender’s accusers, Massie said he needed just two more members on his side of the aisle to sign onto the discharge petition that will allow him to bypass leadership and get his bill on the floor.

All Democrats are expected to put their names on the petition, meaning a total of six Republican signatures is necessary to reach the 218-member threshold.

“We demand real accountability,” said Massie, a Kentucky Republican. “I encourage my colleagues … there’s over 200 Republicans who have not signed this discharge petition. We only need two of them to sign it.”

Massie’s effort at one point seemed all but guaranteed to succeed, but it’s taken a hit amid pressure from the Trump administration to stand down — and as Republican leaders point to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s success so far in compelling the release of Epstein-related documents through a separate subpoena.

“This is the most comprehensive investigation into Epstein and Maxwell to date,” House Oversight chair James Comer (R-Ky.) said Wednesday morning at a GOP leadership press conference, regarding his panel’s probe.

He also said that Epstein’s estate would begin turning over materials on Sept. 8 in compliance with another subpoena that would, among other materials, compel the release of a “birthday book” that reportedly includes a letter from President Donald Trump to Epstein.

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has called Massie’s measure “inartfully drafted” and said he believed the Oversight investigation will uncover new and relevant information as the Justice Department turns over more of the files in its possession.

But Massie countered that the Oversight Committee route is essentially “allowing the DOJ to curate all of the information that the DOJ is giving them.”

He noted that the first batch of materials unloaded Tuesday night included an overwhelming number of redactions and consisted almost exclusively of information that has already been made public. The Oversight Committee also sat on the materials for more than a week before releasing them publicly, allowing staff on both sides of the aisle to comb through documents to ensure that victims’ identities were protected and other criminal matters were not compromised.

Massie’s bill, in contrast, would provide fewer opportunities for the Trump administration and White House allies on Capitol Hill to slow-walk the process of making the Epstein files public.

Whereas the Justice Department is handing over materials piecemeal, Massie’s measure would require the DOJ to turn over nearly all of the information in its possession around Epstein and his co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell — who is now serving a 20-year prison sentence for her part in the sex trafficking scheme — within 30 days.

The bill would allow the DOJ to redact information that could compromise a victim’s identity or depict abuse, but it would have to formally justify its redactions to Congress.

“No record shall be withheld, delayed, or redacted on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure, or foreign dignitary,” the legislation states.

The Epstein saga has, in part, been complicated by President Donald Trump’s ties to the disgraced financier. Trump has maintained that he had a falling out with Epstein, who died by suicide behind bars in 2019 after new sex crimes charges.

Some attendees at the Wednesday press conference held signs that appeared to mock Trump, showing a photo of him and first lady Melania Trump beside Epstein and Maxwell or alleging that the President is on the so-called Epstein list. The Justice Department has said it did not find evidence of the sort of incriminating list.

“The Washington establishment is asking the American public to believe something that is not believable,” Massie said. “They’re asking you to believe that two individuals created hundreds of victims, and they acted alone, and that the DOJ has no idea of who else might’ve been involved.”

Epstein’s victims joined Massie, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) to call for the full release of the files. Responding to Trump’s comments that the Epstein matter was a “hoax,” Haley Robson, one of the women who has accused Epstein of sexual abuse, invited Trump to meet with her in person to hear about her experience. She noted she was a registered Republican.

“Please humanize us,” Robson said. “I would like Donald J. Trump and every person in America and around the world to humanize us. To see us for who we are, and to hear us for what we have to say. There is no hoax. The abuse was real.”

Chauntae Davies, another accuser, said that Epstein would brag about his close friendship with Trump and “had an 8 by 10 framed picture of him on his desk with the two of them.” Davies also said she joined a trip to Africa with Epstein, former President Bill Clinton and others.

Brittany Henderson — an attorney who has worked for some of Epstein’s accusers — suggested at the Wednesday press event it was possible to withhold the identities of some victims without making wholesale redactions designed to shield those who should be held accountable.

“Protect these women while we seek transparency,” Henderson said.

Meredith Lee Hill contributed to this report.

House Democrats are moving to formally reprimand Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) in response to a GOP lawmaker’s effort to censure Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-N.J.).

Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) is proposing to rebuke McIver and remove her from the House Homeland Security Committee after she was charged with assault following a May scuffle outside an New Jersey immigration facility. The House is expected to take up the measure Wednesday.

McIver has denied wrongdoing and vowed to fight the federal assault charge, which Democrats have denounced as partisan.

Mills, meanwhile, has faced a spate of ethical issues including an since-withdrawn allegation of assault and an ongoing legal dispute over a previous relationship. He also faces an ethics investigation into allegations he benefited from federal contracts while in office. Democrats are targeting his north central Florida district and have sought to turn the ethical controversies into a campaign liability.

Censures have become increasingly common in recent congressional history, with the House GOP moving this Congress to reprimand Rep. Al Green (D-Texas) for disrupting President Donald Trump’s joint address to Congress. Three other House Democrats faced censure in the prior Congress.

Disciplinary resolutions some of the few legislative moves available to the House minority — or individual lawmakers — to circumvent majority leadership because censure motions and other moves related to discipline are “privileged,” allowing them to bypass committees to be considered on the House floor.

The Congressional Black Caucus has led Democrats’ effort to defend McIver and is pushing the move against Mills.

“LaMonica is not afraid to fight for her constituents. The Congressional Black Caucus is not afraid to fight for her,” Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), the CBC chair, said in a Wednesday statement. “Our defense of Congresswoman McIver, and our work to hold Mr. Mills accountable are both in service of this Caucus’ relentless pursuit of justice.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Wednesday that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will face “hard questions” over a recent shakeup of top health officials when he appears before senators Thursday.

At Kennedy’s appearance before the Senate Finance Committee, which was first reported by POLITICO, Thune said that the secretary needs to “restore public trust” after Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Susan Monarez was fired and other top CDC officials quickly resigned.

“I would say that, you know, because somebody’s supportive or in favor of vaccines is not disqualifying for that job, so I assume he’ll have some questions to answer tomorrow,” Thune said.

The turnover at the CDC has sparked a wave of concern from some Senate Republicans on public health grounds. But it’s also exposed frustration that the administration is ousting officials just weeks or months into the job after the Senate spent valuable floor time confirming them.

“Honestly he’s got to take responsibility,” Thune added. “We confirm these people, we go through a lot of work to get them confirmed, and they’re in office a month?”

HHS isn’t the only Trump administration department that has seen quick exits. Two Senate-confirmed Treasury officials — IRS Administrator Billy Long and Deputy Secretary Michael Faulkender — departed after just months.

Thune added that Kennedy needs people in key positions who “have some stability and can hopefully command the trust of the American people.”

Thursday’s hearing was scheduled before the CDC shakeup. While Kennedy is coming to testify about Trump’s health agenda, he’s expected to face questions from both sides of the aisle about the turnover.

Kennedy defended the changes during a Fox News interview last week. Though he declined to talk about “personnel issues,” he added that the CDC “is in trouble, and we need to fix it, … and it may be that some people should not be working there anymore.”

The GOP-controlled House has released the first tranche of documents in its investigation into convicted sex offender and disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein — a move intended to quash the mounting calls for answers around why the Justice Department allowed Epstein to continue to prey on victims for decades.

The trove of materials, however, is unlikely to satisfy those clamoring for more and new information about the case. This batch, subpoenaed by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, contains almost exclusively information that has already been released publicly; Oversight Committee Democrats say that, based on their initial review of 33,000 files, only 3 percent of the documents contained new details.

Many of the files appeared to be public court filings, including, for example, a 2021 motion from Epstein’s co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell to dismiss the superseding indictment against her in federal court in New York. Among materials unveiled Tuesday evening, however, are some video clips, including one that appears to feature a young woman recounting her experience as one of Epstein’s masseuses. Her image, and the image of the interviewer, are blurred.

These files were originally handed over to lawmakers last month, but Republicans and Democrats on the House Oversight Committee took more than a week to privately review them. The committee’s GOP majority said it was coordinating with the Justice Department to redact information that could compromise the victims or ongoing criminal matters.

It’s expected that the DOJ will continue to turn over information.

Democrats claim that the only new information in the materials are the flight logs from Customs and Border Protection. The files show Epstein’s travels to destinations such as Paris, New York, and St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.

“To the American people — don’t let this fool you,” said Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, in a statement. “House Republicans are trying to make a spectacle of releasing already-public documents. Pam Bondi has said the client list was on her desk. She could release it right now if she wanted to.”

Epstein died by suicide in 2019, after the Justice Department had levied new sex trafficking charges against him. Maxwell, his co-conspirator, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in the scheme. The Justice Department recently released a transcript of its July interview with her.

The controversy surrounding Epstein ballooned in July when the Justice Department quietly released an unsigned memo that said there was no evidence that Epstein maintained an incriminating so-called client list or that he was murdered in his jail cell and that further information would not be forthcoming.

The move triggered an uproar, as members of both parties accused President Donald Trump and his allies of reneging on their promise to bring transparency to the longstanding allegations against Epstein. Facing an online fury, Trump directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to ask the courts to release additional information in the Epstein case. But several judges ruled that the administration could not release grand jury materials.

At the same time, House GOP leadership was fielding mounting calls from Republicans and Democrats to take action to compel the full release of the files — a political quagmire that continues to plague Speaker Mike Johnson this week after the monthlong congressional recess. In what appeared to be a surprise move forced by Democrats on a House Oversight subcommittee, a majority of members on that subcommittee voted to subpoena the information right before leaving Washington for the August break.

House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) issued the formal subpoena accordingly.

It’s not clear what additional troves of materials could include. The Oversight Committee has also issued a subpoena to Epstein’s estate for more information and asked the Treasury Department for suspicious activity reports that could help with its investigation in the Epstein case.

Alex Acosta, the former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida who also served as Trump’s Labor secretary during his first term, will sit with Congressional investigators Sept. 19. Acosta approved Epstein’s 2008 plea deal that has been widely criticized as far too lenient.

Another Democrat is jumping into the crowded race to oust Republican Sen. Susan Collins.

Maine brewery owner Dan Kleban, 48, announced in a kickoff video Wednesday that he is mounting a Senate bid because Collins has “been in Washington for 30 years, she stopped looking out for us, she lied about protecting abortion rights, and she refuses to stand up to Donald Trump when it really matters.”

In an interview with POLITICO, Kleban said prices are “too damn high” and that he agreed with much of the so-called Abundance movement aimed at bringing costs down “before I even heard of the Abundance movement.” He also said he does not support Sen. Bernie Sanders’ recent resolution to block arms sales to Israel, a contentious issue that has roiled the Democratic Party.

“I believe Israel has a right to defend itself. I don’t think that we solve the horrific humanitarian crisis in Gaza by disarming Israel and exposing them to harm,” said Kleban.

Senate Democrats are targeting Maine in their long-shot campaign to take back the Senate, and many top Democrats are encouraging Gov. Janet Mills to enter the race. Mills has said she is “seriously considering” a run and will make a decision by mid-November. Sanders-endorsed oyster farmer Graham Platner and former End Citizens United Vice President Jordan Wood are also vying for the Democratic Senate nomination in Maine.

Asked whether he would stay in the race if Mills threw her hat in the ring, Kleban was noncommittal.

“If Gov. Mills decides to get into the race, we’ll cross that bridge when we get there,” he said.

Georgia Republican Senate candidate Buddy Carter dropped a new television ad Wednesday, part of a seven-figure blitz that includes the statewide television and streaming spots as well as direct mail aimed at boosting his name ID.

Carter, a fifth-term congressmember, is looking to differentiate himself from a crowded field of candidates to unseat incumbent Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff that includes fellow Rep. Mike Collins and former college football coach Derek Dooley, a political novice hand-picked by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who officially endorsed Dooley in next year’s marquee Senate race.

The Carter ad touts him as a “trusted MAGA warrior” and leans fully into culture war issues, including a championing of bans on trans people from girls sports and serving as a staunch ally of President Donald Trump on illegal border crossings. The ad also splices remarks from Trump from a campaign rally in September 2024 in Savannah, where the then-presidential candidate said “Buddy Carter…warrior…great guy.”

The adds also notes Carter has “racked up win after win” while in Washington, including the passage of the Laken Riley Act, a law named after a University of Georgia student slain by a migrant and a bill Collins was a lead sponsor of.

The Georgia Senate contest is expected to be among the most expensive races in next year’s midterms and is a key race for Democrats to hold in a state Trump won last year.

A poll last month from TechnoMetrica Institute of Policy and and Politics showed the contest for the GOP nomination remains relatively tight, with Collins at 27 percent, Carter at 20 percent and Dooley, who launched his bid last month at 8 percent, with nearly 40 percent of Republican voters undecided.