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Pete Hegseth told reporters Thursday he still has President-elect Donald Trump’s support to be Defense secretary, while also dodging a question about how he is addressing his alcohol use with senators.

“I’m here with the support of President Donald Trump. As long as he supports me, which he told me this morning, I’ll be here,” Hegseth said from Capitol Hill when asked if there were any circumstances under which he would withdraw his name for the position.

The Fox host continues to meet with senators in efforts to secure confirmation votes amid allegations of sexual assault and a problematic drinking habit, both of which he has denied. It’s unclear if the efforts will be enough, as POLITICO previously reported Trump is considering nominating Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to replace Hegseth. The president-elect is eager to know the details of Hegseth’s meetings, Playbook reported.

When asked what he is telling senators regarding his drinking — amid reports that he has vowed to stop drinking if he is confirmed — Hegseth replied, “that’s why I’m telling senators and not you.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who is seen as a critical barometer for Hegseth’s support among Senate Republicans, told Fox News earlier Thursday that she is not ready to vote yes on Hegseth’s confirmation after meeting with the nominee for a “frank and thorough” conversation on Wednesday.

Hegseth maintained Thursday that his meetings have been “great” thus far.

“Senators give great advice and this is how the process works. It’s not going to be tried out here, it’s going to be discussed inside the offices,” he said. “How we rebuild our military, put the war fighters first, that’s what Donald Trump — President Trump has asked me to do, and that’s what we will continue to do.”

Sen. Joni Ernst said she does not have any plans to meet with Pete Hegseth Thursday or Friday, after reaffirming concerns over the Defense Secretary nominee earlier this morning.

When a reporter told Ernst Thursday morning that she did not sound like a “yes” on Hegseth, Ernst responded, “I think you’re right.”

Passing by a Senate office that Hegseth was waiting in, Ernst confirmed she had no plans in the next two days to meet with Hegseth. Earlier in the day, Hegseth declined to answer whether he was meeting with the Iowa senator again, only adding that they had a “great conversation” and an “ongoing conversation.”

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. used an hourslong appearance before House lawmakers to outline sweeping changes the agency is making after its “failure” during the attempted assassinations of Donald Trump.

The Thursday hearing is the second, and final, public meeting by a bipartisan House task force that is investigating the attempted assassination at a Pennsylvania rally in July, as well as a second attempt in Florida. In addition to the hearing, the panel also voted on Thursday to release its final report, detailing its findings and recommendations.

“July 13 was a failure of the Secret Service to adequately secure the Butler farm show site and protect President-Elect Trump. That abject failure underscored critical gaps within Secret Service operations, and I recognize that we did not meet the expectations of the American public, Congress and our protectees,” Rowe told the House panel on Thursday.

Rowe detailed several changes that the Secret Service has already made both while speaking to the committee and in a lengthier written statement, including increasing the use of drones and counter-drone technology, making structural changes within the Secret Service and increasing Trump’s detail during the final months of the campaign. Rowe also said that the Secret Service is in the process of increasing its staffing.

While most of the hearing was cordial, there were brief fiery moments between Rowe and, in particular, Republican members of the panel.

Tensions briefly boiled over between Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas) and Rowe as Fallon used a photo of a 9/11 remembrance event to ask Rowe about his role at the event. Fallon accused him of putting other Secret Service agents out of their usual positions so he could be more visible at the event — an accusation Rowe denied, saying security wasn’t impacted. He is visible in a photo of the event standing near President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, JD Vance and congressional leaders.

“Do not invoke 9/11 for political purposes,” Rowe yelled. “You are out of line.”

As Rowe called Fallon “out of order,” the Texas Republican yelled back: “Don’t try to bully me.”

Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.), a member of the task force who also leads the Homeland Security Committee, also questioned Rowe on the culture within the Secret Service.

“Your guys showed up that day and didn’t give a shit. There was apathy and complacency, period, and that is your mission now. … This is a leadership issue, a command-climate issue, a culture issue,” Green said.

After Chair Mike Kelly (R-Pa.) said “hell” toward the tail end of the hearing, he referred back to Green’s swearing, saying, “I know we’re not supposed to use any language like that. Chairman Green, I know it’s a very emotional thing for you too.”

Despite those moments of high drama, members of the task force largely used the hearing to drill down on changes that the Secret Service has made since July 13.

Rowe specifically pointed to the communications and coordination lapses during the July 13 rally and “what is glaring to me is the failure to recognize the significance of the AGR building,” referring to the building rooftop the July 13 shooter was able to access to fire off shots at Trump.

The Secret Service is “supposed to identify hazards, risks, and then mitigate those risks effectively. … We did not do that on the 13th. Post-July 13, there was a renewed focus on that,” Rowe said.

And his decision to acknowledge the “failure” of the Secret Service’s preparation and handling of Trump’s July 13 rally earned praise from members on both sides of the panel.

“I thank you, Director Rowe and all of your talented agents, for seriously looking at what failed. And I appreciate that you used immediately in your testimony that July 13 was a failure,” Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) said.

But Congress is still expected to make additional changes to the Secret Service next year, including forthcoming proposals to remove the Secret Service and FEMA from under the Department of Homeland Security.

“I would surmise that the Department of Homeland Security has become too big. It can’t function … I’m going to be filing a bill the first day of next Congress to remove FEMA and Secret Service from Homeland Security and make them direct reports to the White House,” Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) said.

“I think the changes you want to make, I think you’ll be able to make them quicker if you’re not within Homeland,” he added.

Sen. John Cornyn said Thursday he is confident that Kash Patel “will be” confirmed to lead the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“People I know and who I trust speak well of him and I’m looking forward to meeting with him,” Cornyn (R-Texas) told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt.

Cornyn, who previously served as the chamber’s Republican whip and last month lost a bid to become majority leader, said Patel had “vast experience” and had been highly recommended by “people I have great respect for.”

Cornyn said he spoke Wednesday with President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney general, Pam Bondi, who he said “spoke highly of” Patel. He said he had not yet met with Patel but would schedule a meeting soon.

The comments come as some of Trump’s more controversial Cabinet nominees swarm the Hill in an attempt to quell concerns from senators — even within their own party. Patel, a former Defense Department official in Trump’s first administration, said before he was nominated he would “shut down the FBI Hoover building on Day 1 and reopen it the next day as a museum of the deep state.”

Sen. Joni Ernst isn’t ready to throw her weight behind Pete Hegseth’s bid to lead the Pentagon, she said Thursday on Fox News.

Ernst (R-Iowa), who had a “frank and thorough” conversation with the Defense Department pick on Wednesday, was asked if she’s not ready to vote yes on Hegseth amid allegations of sexual misconduct and troublesome drinking. She replied: “I think you are right.”

“A number of our senators, they want to make sure that any allegations have been cleared and that’s why we have to have a very thorough vetting process,” Ernst said. “The vetting will continue, I am certain, through the next month or so until we approach that hearing date.”

Ernst is a veteran herself and has made combating sexual assault in the military a key bipartisan focus of her time in the Senate. She’s seen as a critical barometer for Hegseth’s support among Senate Republicans and has been rumored as a possible replacement for the post herself.

During the first meeting of the Senate DOGE caucus, Sen. Joni Ernst plans to highlight one of Republicans’ favorite bureaucratic boogeymen: remote work.

Ernst (R-Iowa), the head of the caucus, is sharing a 60-page report, a copy of which was obtained by POLITICO, in the group’s meeting on Thursday, focused on reforming telework and shedding unused or underused government offices.

“The American people gave us a mandate to shake up business as usual in Washington and drain the swamp. That starts with getting the bureaucrat class to climb out of the bubble bath, put away the golf clubs, and get back to work,” Ernst said in a statement to POLITICO.

Some of the ideas Ernst focuses on in her report, as well as a separate one-pager, include examples of federal employees receiving incorrect locality pay, which is determined by their official work site, as well as relocating federal employees and consolidating federal office space. That includes proposing Congress pass legislation to move the headquarters of several departments and agencies outside of Washington.

She also wants President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming Cabinet and agency heads to share their daily schedules publicly and detail how they will get a 60 percent utilization rate for their headquarters.

The Senate DOGE caucus meeting comes as the two heads of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, are set to have their first large-scale meeting with House and Senate Republicans on Thursday since Trump tapped them to lead the out-of-government effort aimed at reforming and cutting the size of the federal government.

Ernst has already met with Trump’s DOGE team and sent them a letter proposing areas for cutting spending last month.

Congressional Republicans have rushed to embrace the DOGE mission, even as the actual authority of the panel remains murky. In addition to the Senate DOGE caucus, the House has formed its own DOGE caucus that got its first Democratic members this week. The House Oversight Committee also established a subcommittee to coordinate with DOGE that will be led by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Musk, Ramaswamy and DOGE have been tasked with coordinating with the White House. Many of their proposals will also need congressional buy-in, though they’ve floated trying to challenge the Impoundment Control Act to allow Trump to bypass Congress on spending cuts. And while Republicans tasked with funding the government might be skeptical, they haven’t shut the door yet on their ideas.

“My job is to work with the president, not against the president,” House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) told reporters recently.

Capitol Hill on Thursday will be rife with action on ethics reports, DOGE, the assassination attempts against President-elect Donald Trump and the embattled nomination of Pete Hegseth to lead the Pentagon, among other topics.

What’s on tap? 

DOGE VIPs: Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are due to huddle with congressional Republicans in the afternoon as they ramp up ideas for their so-called Department of Government Efficiency, aimed at massively slashing government spending. Ideas have been as varied as cutting the independent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and ending daylight saving time.

Trump attempted assassinations review: The special task force set up to probe the two attempted assassinations of Trump will meet at 9:30 a.m. for its final hearing. The star witness will be U.S. Secret Service Acting Director Ronald L. Rowe Jr. There will be a business meeting after the hearing to consider the final report.

Hegseth marches on: His odds of confirmation are looking shaky at best, but Pentagon nominee Pete Hegseth will continue meeting with senators on Thursday. He got some good news late Wednesday when Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said “I see no reason not to be supportive of him” following a meeting, though he cautioned “we’ll see what else happens.” Hegseth is facing allegations of sexual misconduct and problematic drinking, which he has dismissed as smears meant to damage his nomination.

Ethics report watch: There will be multiple possible paths for the release of an ethics report on former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), Trump’s onetime pick to be attorney general. The House Ethics Committee itself will convene to mull releasing its work once again — they opted against doing so in late November. Then, there could be floor action on two resolutions — one from Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.) and another from Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) — to compel the release of investigative materials, though Republicans are expected to table them, citing the fact Gaetz is no longer a member of Congress.

Two other legislative developments worthy of attention:

  • Disaster funding opposition: The House Freedom Caucus came out against attaching disaster funding to any short-term government funding bill unless it is “what is absolutely necessary right now” and offset. The practical implications: Speaker Mike Johnson will likely have to rely on hefty Democratic support for the eventual bill and place it on the suspension calendar, which would require the support of two-thirds of the chamber for passage. 
  • Disaster tax relief bill: The Senate passed a bill by voice vote late Wednesday that would provide tax relief to those impacted by wildfires, hurricanes, floods, tornadoes and the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment. The measure had already passed the House, so it now heads to President Joe Biden for his signature. “I applaud the Senate for putting this relief within arms reach for Floridians — we’re talking about hundreds of millions of dollars in Floridians’ pockets thanks to my legislation,” lead sponsor Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) said in a statement. 

LOS ANGELES — Leave it to the Golden State to provide a rare ray of sunshine for national Democrats this election cycle.

Nearly a month after Election Day, Democrats clinched their final House win of the cycle this week, a capstone to winning four of the six most competitive California congressional races. Their strong showing, despite a statewide rightward shift that echoed national trends, led to the party ousting three incumbent Republicans and bringing them tantalizingly close to capturing the chamber.

In a cycle where very little went right for Democrats, their successes in California — and New York, another blue state bastion that delivered multiple red-to-blue flips — showed that the party’s relentless coastal focus paid some dividends. Democrats lavished far more attention, and crucially, money, on key races in those states compared to two years ago, enabling them to prevail against stiff political headwinds, sometimes by the barest of margins.

That consolation prize was enough for Californian and third-ranking House Democrat Rep. Pete Aguilar to take a victory lap Wednesday after a caucus meeting, which featured newly-minted winner Adam Gray — who took his Central Valley race by just 187 votes — beaming in via FaceTime.

“Ultimately, these candidates and their stories is what broke through,” Aguilar told reporters at his weekly news conference. “Netting three seats was a very big deal for California, a point of pride.”

While precinct-level deep dives are still to come, Aguilar sketched out in broad strokes what he saw as the Democrats’ successful formula in his home state: better candidates, more resources and driving a message on “quality of life issues.”

That combination helped reverse two consecutive cycles of setbacks for California Democrats, who swelled their ranks in the 2018 blue wave, only to lose four seats two years later and fail to reclaim them in 2022.

“Clearly, 2018 was the high water mark, and since then, all they’ve been able to do is claw back some of the territory that they lost,” said Jacob Rubashkin, deputy editor of Inside Elections, a nonpartisan campaign almanac.

In California, winning back that ground was an expensive proposition. In 2022, Democratic challengers were perpetually outgunned by cash-flush GOP incumbents. The party’s House campaign arm and the affiliated outside group House Majority PAC abandoned the expensive Los Angeles media market entirely, which touches four hotly-contested districts.

This time, Democratic candidates routinely posted seven-figure fundraising hauls, putting them in a position to more efficiently buy TV airtime. And they were boosted by substantial investments by the party and major super PACs, which early on oriented their funding goals in anticipation of the high cost of playing in those races.

“We knew from the onset how important these seats would be, and so did Republicans,” said Dan Gottlieb, spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “Ultimately, we had a better formula to win these races and defy the political headwinds blowing the GOP’s way, and now these dysfunctional Republicans will have to manage through the smallest House majority in nearly a century.”

House Majority PAC also identified the California races early on as top priorities and set an initial spending target of $35 million. It ended up spending $50 million — almost five times more than it did two years prior.

Labor unions, another essential part of the Democrats’ arsenal, zeroed in on the state’s congressional races in a way they hadn’t since before the pandemic, said Lorena Gonzalez, who leads the California Labor Federation.

“When we are focused and we don’t end up in 10 different places, we do much better,” Gonzalez said, noting the labor movement sidestepped two major ballot initiative clashes with business groups, clearing the way for a single-minded focus on the House.

Republicans on the ground felt the disparity — particularly after former Rep. Kevin McCarthy was ousted from the speakership, denying vulnerable incumbents a powerful home state patron.

“We got outspent by $6 million,” said GOP Rep. John Duarte, who lost by a dental-floss thin margin to Gray. He acknowledged getting support from the national party and Congressional Leadership Fund, the super PAC directed by Speaker Mike Johnson.

“But if you look at the McCarthy money and some of the other independent expenditures, it never came in,” he said.

New York Democrats similarly swelled their efforts after being stunned by the loss of four House races in 2022. House Majority PAC plowed $50 million into the state, nearly quadrupling its previous investment, and two separate efforts founded in the wake of the midterm drubbing beefed up the Dems’ ground game.

The New York Democratic Party launched a “coordinated campaign” — led by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and Gov. Kathy Hochul, who was blamed for some of the 2022 losses — that knocked three times more doors in battleground districts than in 2022. A coalition of labor unions and left-leaning groups called Battleground New York raised $11 million and focused on turning out three groups: “drop-off voters,” voters of color and newer voters.

As a result, Democrats flipped four seats between a February special election and last month’s contests, reversing their midterm losses.

Two of the newly elected New York House Democrats — Laura Gillen and Josh Riley — won after losing by mere points in 2022, both appealing to independent and Republican voters and voicing their willingness to stand up to their fellow Democrats on border security.

“Frankly, I think in 2022, we, the Democrats, were surprised by some of those races, and certainly had not put a lot of money or organization or attention into those,” Rep. Dan Goldman (D-N.Y.) said in an interview. “This time around, there was no surprise. … the state party was far more involved. Certainly, we in the delegation in Congress were very actively campaigning in those districts, and you just had high-quality candidates.”

California Democrats also credited their candidates with being able to defy their party’s gloomy national prospects, often running ahead of Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket.

“Each one was able to establish a brand, a narrative that did not fit neatly into what Republicans were trying to label all Democrats as nationally,” said Orrin Evans, a Democratic strategist who worked on two winning toss-up Orange County races.

One client, Dave Min, is a Korean American former state lawmaker who embodied the demographic changes that had transformed ruby-red Orange County to a purple battleground. He was able to hold the seat left vacant by outgoing Rep. Katie Porter, despite lacking her commanding spending advantage or national profile. He did it by running offense on public safety, overcoming his party’s soft-on-crime stereotype and his own drunken driving arrest.

“Dave Min was endorsed by every law enforcement organization in the state,” Evans said. A messaging war on crime “was a debate we were eager to have,” particularly given Baugh’s own past scrapes with campaign finance violations.

In a neighboring Orange County district, Derek Tran, a Vietnamese American first-time candidate, was well-positioned to peel away support from Little Saigon and defeat incumbent GOP Rep. Michelle Steel by roughly 650 votes.

Democrats had failed in two consecutive cycles to dislodge Los Angeles-area GOP Rep. Mike Garcia, despite their party’s double-digit registration advantage. This time, the party backed George Whitesides, the former CEO of Virgin Galactic. Whitesides’ profile — his ability to self-fund, plus his business background that resonated in a district with a heavy aerospace presence — earned grudging respect, even from Republicans.

“George Whitesides was probably the Democrats’ most impressive new recruit that they got throughout the entire country,” said one national GOP strategist who was granted anonymity to speak frankly. “I don’t think there was a better first-time candidate for them this cycle than in that seat.”

A sterling candidate profile can only go so far. Will Rollins, a former prosecutor who ran for a second time against Rep. Ken Calvert, the dean of the state’s GOP delegation, was a top-notch fundraiser and had a telegenic television presence, but it was not enough to overcome the red tilt of the Inland Empire district — though fellow Democrats don’t fault him for it.

“I only wish Will Rollins would run again,” said California Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell. “He was the perfect candidate for that race. It’s just that that was a really tough seat.”

Rollins was the only California Democrat to seriously challenge a GOP incumbent in a district that Donald Trump won in 2020. In the other five seats, Democrats were playing on blue-tinted territory. But even a 13-point party registration advantage was not enough to unseat Republican Rep. David Valadao, who easily beat his Democratic challenger Rudy Salas.

There are some ominous trends for the party even in its victories, such as Gray’s whisper-thin win in a majority-Latino district where Democrats have a nearly 11-point registration edge. Early in the cycle, Gray cited those figures in arguing that, in a presidential year turnout, the math favored the Democrats. That ended up being just barely true.

“It’s a warning sign that Democrats are getting from all corners of the country, which is that lower-propensity voters are no longer their friends,” said Rubashkin of Inside Elections.

Republicans point out that Democratic football spiking makes their wins look more impressive than they actually are.

“How insane is it that the Democrats are having to spend $40 or $50 million in traditionally blue states and blue districts, which is supposed to be their territory, because they were so lackadaisical the last couple of cycles that they kind of screwed up, let those seats go and then they almost lost these seats [this time],” said the national GOP strategist. “I mean, 650 votes is nothing to be that proud of after you’ve spent however much money that they did.”

For now, though, Democrats are accentuating the positive, choosing to bask in their net gain of one House seat, giving Republicans just a 220-215 margin and success of ousting California Republican incumbents who have bedeviled them for years.

“Mike Garcia and Michelle Steel have been survivors since 2020 and that’s impressive,” said CJ Warnke, spokesperson for House Majority PAC. “To beat people who are able to hold on in a district like that, you need to recruit the highest quality of candidate.”

Dustin Gardiner contributed to this report.

Here’s what we’re watching in transition world today:

 🗓️ What we’re watching

  • Pete Hegseth and his allies attempted to salvage his nomination to lead the Pentagon on Wednesday, but it’s unclear whether their joint efforts would be enough. Trump was still publicly supporting the nomination, but people close to the president-elect said he has been mulling contingency plans.
  • President-elect Donald Trump is eager for details on Hegseth’s meetings on the hill, Playbook reports this morning. He’s especially keen on learning more about Hegseth’s conservation with Sen. Joni Ernst, who described it as “frank and thorough.”
  • Trump is finally allowing the FBI to vet his nominees, but it doesn’t mean he has to listen to the bureau. As president, Trump can grant security clearances to anyone, even if the FBI raises issues. 
  • A return to the White House for Trump is helping revitalize Gov. Ron DeSantis’ political fortune

👀 What’s Trump up to?

  • Trump has lined up his first network interview since winning the election with NBC’s Kristen Welker on “Meet the Press” set to air at 10:30 a.m. ET on Sunday.  The interview will take place on Friday.

📝ICYMI: Here are the latest Cabinet picks 

  • Trump tapped former Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler to lead the Small Business Administration
  • Former Missouri Rep. Billy Long was picked to be the IRS’s new commissioner
  • Trump changed his mind Wednesday about his White House’s top lawyer, elevating David Warrington to the role just three weeks after initially giving the job to veteran GOP lawyer William McGinley
  • Trump said he will nominate former Wall Street regulator Paul Atkins to run the Securities and Exchange Commission
  • Trump selected finance professor Michael Faulkender to be deputy Treasury secretary
  • Investor Daniel Driscoll was tapped to become the next secretary of the Army
  • Trump picked Jared Isaacman, a billionaire and space explorer, to be the head of NASA.

President-elect Donald Trump said Wednesday that he has picked Frank Bisignano, the CEO of fintech and payments company Fiserv, to run the Social Security Administration.

Bisignano previously was chief operating officer at JPMorgan Chase and held a number of executive positions at Citigroup.

“Frank is a business leader, with a tremendous track record of transforming large corporations,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. “He will be responsible to deliver on the Agency’s commitment to the American People for generations to come!”

During the campaign, Trump pledged to eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits.

Bisignano is a GOP donor who backed former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio in 2016 but donated to Trump’s campaign in 2019.