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A broad group of House and Senate GOP leaders will meet with President Donald Trump at the White House today at 3 p.m., according to two people familiar with the plans.

Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune are expected to meet with Trump earlier before the larger group joins.

It’s their first business meeting since Trump took the oath of office Monday, and GOP leaders are hoping to hammer out more details there on how exactly they’re expected to accomplish his ambitious legislative agenda.

After the top leaders meet with Trump, the expanded group will join. That includes, from the House, Majority Leader Steve Scalise (La.), Whip Tom Emmer (Minn.), Conference Chair Lisa McClain (Mich.) and Policy Committee Chair Kevin Hern (Okla.). From the Senate, Whip John Barrasso (Wyo.), Conference Chair Tom Cotton (Ark.) and Vice Chair Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.) are also expected to join.

Thorny topics that will determine the GOP agenda ahead still require sign-off from Trump. Johnson in particular is wary of a repeat of the funding meltdown in December when the then-president-elect torpedoed an agreement at the last minute.

Thune and Johnson also need to discuss with Trump the rapidly approaching debt ceiling, which GOP leaders want to tackle in bipartisan funding talks.

Scott Bessent, President Donald Trump’s pick for Treasury secretary, won bipartisan support Tuesday as his nomination cleared a Senate committee.

The Senate Finance Committee voted 16-11 to advance Bessent’s nomination, clearing the way for a Senate floor vote in the coming days.

Two Democrats — Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) — joined with the committee’s Republicans in supporting Bessent for the top economic job in Trump’s Cabinet.

After signing a flurry of executive orders, President Donald Trump will shift to his Capitol Hill agenda Tuesday in a White House meeting with Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

The new Republican trifecta has much to discuss. GOP lawmakers want more guidance on whether they’ll be expected to cram Trump’s priorities on the border, energy and taxes into one bill or two. They also want directions on spending limits needed to pass government funding legislation by mid-March and clarity on how to handle the debt limit, as the U.S. faces a potential default in the months ahead.

“All of it’s on the table,” Johnson said in an interview.

Here’s what else we’re watching today:

  • Ratcliffe and Hegseth: Thune said he’s hoping to confirm John Ratcliffe to be CIA director in a Senate floor vote Tuesday. He’ll need the green light from every senator, otherwise the majority leader will have to wait a few days to bring it up. It’s unclear when he’ll look to move forward on Defense nominee Pete Hegseth.
  • Other nominees: The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will hold a hearing on Rep. Elise Stefanik’s nomination for U.N. ambassador and Senate Veterans’ Affairs will hold a hearing on former Rep. Doug Collins’ nomination for VA secretary. The Senate Finance Committee will vote on Scott Bessent for Treasury secretary.
  • TikTok drama continues: Trump’s Day One decision to rescue TikTok is frustrating Senate Republicans, setting up a clash between the new president and members of his own party. While some GOP lawmakers insist the Beijing-based ByteDance doesn’t need more time to divest, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) are putting together a bipartisan, bicameral coalition to save the app through legislation.

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Jordain Carney and Ben Leonard contributed to this report.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday night that repeals a provision allowing transgender troops to serve in the military, part of a wide-ranging effort to end Biden-era policies his first day in office.

Trump issued a ban during his first administration that prevented transgender troops from serving, which former President Joe Biden eliminated. While Trump did not institute a new ban, the repeal of the Biden-era executive order clears the way for one.

The president, in a separate set of executive orders, declared the government would recognize only two sexes — male and female. He also rolled back diversity and inclusion programs across all federal agencies.

The Department of Defense, in 2019, estimated that up to 8,000 transgender people served in the military, just before Trump’s first ban took effect.

President Donald Trump issued a stark message Monday to would-be economic and strategic partners in Latin America: The U.S. doesn’t need you.

Speaking from the Oval Office after signing a spate of executive orders, Trump was asked about relations with Latin America and Brazil and said the relationship “should be great.” But he made it clear who needs who more in the relationship.

“They need us much more than we need them. We don’t need them,” he said. “They need us. Everybody needs us.”

Those comments seem poised to deflate hopes of some in Latin America that Trump would refocus resources on shoring up ties with countries in the Americas.

China and Russia have increased their footholds in the region over the past decade, financing major infrastructure projects including deep water ports, and providing more security partnerships for authoritarian states such as Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

Those hopes were buoyed by Trump’s pick of newly confirmed Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was a key voice on Latin America policy in the Senate.

Other comments from Trump on Monday seem poised to alienate countries in the region further. Trump repeated false claims about the Panama Canal, hours after threatening once again to retake the canal. He also threatened to reimpose tariffs on trade partners Canada and Mexico and left the door open to using the U.S. military against Mexican drug cartels.

Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida was confirmed Monday as secretary of State, the first of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks to take office.

In becoming secretary of State, Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants, also makes history as the highest-ranking U.S. politician of Latino and Hispanic descent to date.

Rubio experienced a relatively easy and trouble-free confirmation process. The third-term Florida lawmaker was the top Republican member of the selective Senate Intelligence Committee and served on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Not a single senator opposed his nomination on the Senate floor and he faced no opposition in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee markup that preceded it.

But there’s been debate around Washington as to how long Rubio will remain in the role, given that during Trump’s first team many of his top officials departed amid disagreements over policy or were dismissed after falling out of favor with the president.

Rubio takes the reins as America’s top diplomat as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine enters a third year, Israel and Hamas implement a long-negotiated cease-fire agreement in the Gaza Strip and increased Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific has rattled U.S. allies.

He also inherits a State Department that has been increasingly marginalized in the U.S. foreign policy process by the faster and less bureaucratic White House National Security Council.

Four years after President Donald Trump helped incite a mob to storm the Capitol to block the certification of the 2020 election he lost, he took aim at his political enemies — including the select panel that investigated the violent event.

Trump promised the crowd in the inauguration’s “overflow room” in the Capitol Visitors Center, following his formal inaugural remarks in the Rotunda: “You’re going to see a lot of action on J6 hostages.”

He has floated pardoning the rioters, many of whom are facing formal criminal charges.

Trump also took aim at the last-minute pardons and commutations President Joe Biden issued in his final hours in office, including those who served on a select committee tasked with looking into the role Trump played in circumventing the 2020 election results that culminated in the riots at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Trump called former Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the former top Republican on the select panel, a “crying lunatic,” and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who did not receive a pardon from Biden, “guilty as hell.”

He also claimed again, without evidence, that the 2020 election was rigged against him.

Trump had been giving what appeared to be unscripted remarks to supporters who hadn’t been able to join in-person for the main inaugural event in the Capitol Rotunda given space constraints, once the celebration was moved indoors due to extreme cold weather.

The cavernous main room of the Capitol Visitor Center had been converted into an overflow space, where some celebrities, governors, foreign dignitaries, congressional spouses and other VIPs were relegated. Trump received a warm welcome from an audience that included Govs. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia and Ron DeSantis of Florida; internet personalities like Theo Von and Jake and Logan Paul; New York Mayor Eric Adams; and former Arizona governor and Senate candidate Kari Lake.

House Oversight and Government Reform Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) delivered a blistering statement against his former Democratic counterpart on the committee, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), who received a preemptive pardon from outgoing President Joe Biden on Monday.

“Jamie Raskin will be remembered for his abuse of power, hypocrisy, consistent dishonesty, and unwavering loyalty to Joe Biden, despite evidence showing that Biden and his family were involved in peddling influence for tens of millions of dollars with our adversaries around the world,” said Comer. “Jamie Raskin once claimed that ‘the seeking of pardons is a powerful demonstration of the consciousness of guilt, or at least the consciousness that you may be in trouble.’ It’s clear that the chickens have come home to roost for Jamie Raskin.”

Raskin, who is now the ranking member on the House Judiciary Committee, was the lead impeachment manager for incoming President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial, which charged that Trump sought to overturn the results of the 2020 election that culminated in a violent riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He went on to serve on a select committee to further investigate Trump’s role in election outcome interference.

Biden, in his final morning in office, issued preemptive pardons for all the members of that committee, including committee staff, to shield them from any legal action Trump’s Justice Department might take against them in retaliation for their efforts.

Raskin has not yet said whether he will accept the pardon.

Comer, meanwhile, led his own impeachment inquiry at the committee level into whether Biden used his position of power to benefit his family.

With TikTok back online after shutting off for less than a day, the company embarked on an inaugural weekend goodwill tour aimed at incoming President Donald Trump, the person the video-sharing app is counting on to save it in the long term.

On Sunday, TikTok contributed $50,000 to a party in honor of Gen Z Trump supporters and his biggest social media allies. TikTok’s lobbyist Mac Abrams made his rounds, and guests including Trump campaign adviser Alex Bruesewitz and Republican political activist Scott Presler rubbed elbows with former British Prime Minister Liz Truss and boxer Scott McGregor.

“If anyone can negotiate a deal that keeps TikTok alive while simultaneously protecting the data of the American people, it’s President Trump,” Bruesewitz told the crowd.

The party’s other sponsors were Kalshi, which recently named Donald Trump Jr. as a strategic adviser, and the American Conservation Coalition.

The night before, TikTok hosted Trump-aligned influencers and other guests to watch a Washington Capitals hockey game from a suite in the Capital One Arena.

CEO Shou Zi Chew is set to attend the inauguration Monday, and advisers to Trump have discussed having the incoming president sign an executive order to rescue the app shortly after he’s sworn in.

The overtures to Trumpworld capped a tumultuous weekend in which TikTok shut down, then restored service to U.S. customers on Sunday after the Supreme Court upheld a law forcing its sale or ban, and the incoming president promised he’d somehow grant the company a reprieve.

TikTok punctuated the drama with notes of appreciation to Trump.

Following the high court decision Friday, Chew thanked Trump in a TikTok, saying, “We are grateful and pleased to have the support of a president who truly understands our platform” and adding, “more to come.”

When the app revoked access for its U.S. users on Saturday night, it said in a pop-up message, “We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office.”

It once again name-checked the incoming president when it restored service a day later, saying in a statement, “We thank President Trump for providing the necessary clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no penalties.”

The love was mutual.

“We need to save TikTok because we’re talking about a tremendous audience that goes to TikTok,” Trump said at a rally he held Sunday at Capital One Arena.

TikTok and Trump’s team have been speaking directly about how to move forward, two people granted anonymity to discuss private discussions told POLITICO.

Those conversations have been focused on finding a privacy and data security solution that appeases some of the national security concerns that were cited by the Supreme Court, one of the people said.

The incoming president proposed the idea of a joint venture for TikTok, with the U.S. owning 50 percent, but it raised a raft of legal questions.

Meanwhile, the influencers who attended Sunday’s party were eager to be part of a critical national conversation — albeit with some whiplash.

“I wouldn’t be here without this,” said a TikToker who goes by the name Chelly and does Vivek Ramaswamy impressions on the platform. “All of the sudden the [app] shut down and then all of the sudden it came back all in one weekend. It feels like a toxic ex.”

Welcome to the Washington trifecta, Republicans. Now get ready to wait.

Even as the GOP takes unified control of the House, Senate and White House on Monday, congressional leaders are facing doubts about just how quickly they will be able to deliver major wins for Donald Trump. Their legislative plans are highly unsettled, and the clock is ticking toward distracting fights over federal spending and the debt limit.

And when it comes to the heart of Trump’s agenda — a sprawling party-line effort encompassing border, energy and tax policy — key strategic questions remain in flux. Once they agree on the general direction of travel, leaders will then have to navigate a thicket of nasty intraparty disputes on the policies themselves.

Under the most ambitious timeline put forth by Speaker Mike Johnson, it will be Memorial Day before that bill lands on Trump’s desk. Deeply skeptical Senate Republicans are readying their own conflicting plans in case the House falters.

“Everybody is feeling the pressure now of time,” said Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina, a member of the hard-right Freedom Caucus who has been pushing for quicker action. “In a short period, we’ve got to make something happen.”

Some smaller wins are at hand: Thanks to some Democratic cooperation in the Senate, Republicans expect to send a relatively small-bore immigration bill to Trump this week.

Named after a Georgia nursing student murdered last year, the Laken Riley Act would require broader incarcerations of undocumented immigrants accused of crimes. But it’s only a sliver of what Trump has in mind for immigration policy.

To fill out the House floor schedule in the first weeks, Johnson is eyeing bills on abortion and public safety that will likely get filibustered in the Senate. He’s also planning to put a bipartisan forestry and wildfire prevention bill up for a vote this week, with Congress unlikely to pass any aid for the wildfires tearing through California until at least March.

The Senate will churn through confirmations of Trump’s Cabinet and other nominees. And both chambers are hoping to use Congressional Review Act powers to claw back key Biden administration rules, something GOP leaders hope will help calm antsy conservatives.

But there is a massive distraction also looming: A March 14 government funding deadline that could result in a government shutdown if Trump and Republicans can’t come to a deal with congressional Democrats who still hold leverage due to the Senate filibuster.

Johnson has been moving carefully on the spending discussions and the party-line agenda talks, mindful of staying on the same page as Trump — who upended the last spending deal the speaker cut with Democrats in December. This time Johnson wants Trump’s sign off on key details related to both initiatives, according to two people granted anonymity to discuss the closed-door conversations. But it’s unclear if that will ever come.

Meanwhile, the committee chairs who will actually have to write the bills are left tapping their feet. “We’re running out of time,” said House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.), who is waiting on top-line discretionary spending targets.

Settling some of these outstanding questions is likely to be on the agenda for a high-level meeting between Trump and congressional leaders Tuesday. Impatience is already emerging as a theme in interbranch relations: In a series of meetings last week on Capitol Hill, Trump policy chief Stephen Miller relayed the president-elect’s desire for “immediacy” in pushing through his legislative agenda.

The pressure is just as intense inside the House, where Norman and his fellow Freedom Caucus members continue to push a two-track approach to the party-line agenda in defiance of Johnson.

They want a smaller, border-focused package first that includes a debt limit hike and spending cuts. That’s essentially the opposite of what Johnson is now steering the conference toward — one massive bill with tax reform included but leaving a debt limit hike for bipartisan government funding talks.

Listed as a “key benefit” in the Freedom Caucus plan: “Speed to deliver huge early wins on key priorities for President Trump.”

Johnson, who shares fears with some House committee chairs that breaking up the bills could make them harder to pass given his narrow majority, tried to temper the unrest by laying out an aggressive timeline for pushing through the sprawling megabill in a closed-door conference meeting last week.

The timeline was a good start, one GOP lawmaker said leaving the meeting. “But at the end of the day, we need to know the plan,” the member said.

The speaker has also launched a listening tour. He is with scores of members about the plans, with a focus on hearing out their thoughts on making trillions of dollars in highly controversial spending cuts. GOP Whip Tom Emmer has corralled small working groups to hash out members’ diverging demands.

Meanwhile, leaders in both chambers are counting on Trump to settle things down with a flurry of Day One executive orders, many of which are expected to deal with immigration and reversing Biden-era climate and pandemic policies. Those actions, they hope will dampen the hard-liners’ push for immediate and sweeping legislative action on the border.

“I expect the president’s going to develop hand cramps signing executive orders,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said. “And that will demonstrate meaningful progress.”

But many senators still want to push their own two-track plan — notably Budget Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who is preparing a border-first budget blueprint to jam the House with, should Johnson fail to deliver on a tight timeline.

Sen. Ted Budd (R-N.C.), who attended a meeting with Miller and House Republicans last week, said Trump’s early immigration executive orders would be “a good start” but “not permanent” and Republicans want to “codify” those executive actions in law — quickly.