 Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: Senate Republican Conference Chair John Barrasso has voted against most of the big bills that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has helped shepherd through the Senate this Congress, putting him in an unusual position as he runs to be GOP whip. Playbook: Jeff Zients, Janet Yellen, Rosario Dawson, Chris LaCivita, and John Hamm are some of the faces who will sit at tables hosted by various news outlets at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday. The Early 202: McConnell is eager to step out of leadership and into a role as a rank-and-file member. “After 18 years of kind of getting beat up and defending everybody else, I’m kind of looking forward to pursuing what I want to pursue and saying what I want to say,” he said. Axios: About half of Americans say they would support “mass deportations of undocumented immigrants,” according to a new poll. White House- President Biden will spend the day in Syracuse, N.Y. to tout a new $6.1 billion grant for Micron to expand facilities producing advanced memory chips through the CHIPS and Science Act. The money will fuel the construction and expansion of semiconductor manufacturing facilities in Clay, N.Y. and Boise, Idaho. A senior administration official said the announcement represents the last of the major leading-edge chips awards under the program. Biden will also attend a campaign reception in Westchester County.
- Biden pardoned or commuted the prison sentences of 16 people convicted of nonviolent drug crimes.
- Biden met with Abigail Edan, a four-year-old American held hostage by Hamas in Gaza before she was released last year.
- A US Secret Service agent assigned to Vice President Harris’ detail got into a physical altercation with other agents at Andrews Air Force Base on Monday before she arrived there. — Washington Examiner
- This morning, Harris announced plans to headline a nationwide “economy opportunity tour,” which will kick off with an event in Atlanta, Ga. on Monday.
Congress- Rep. Donald Payne, D-N.J., died Wednesday after experiencing a heart attack on April 6 that put him in a coma for more than two weeks. He was 65.
- House Ways and Means Republicans announced the creation of 10 tax teams composed of GOP committee members to study expiring provisions of the 2017 tax cuts ahead of next year’s tax cliff. The groups are tasked with crafting legislative measures to address areas like manufacturing, domestic innovation and supply chains. “The mission of these Tax Teams will be to build on the success of the Trump tax cuts to provide a pro-America, pro-worker vision for the future,” Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith said in a statement.
Courts- Eleven Arizona Republicans and seven former Trump aides have been charged in the fake electors scheme in Arizona that played out during the 2020 election. Among them: Former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows and Rudy Giuliani. Trump is referred to as “unindicted coconspirator 1” in the indictment. —Arizona Republic
- Conservative Supreme Court justices on Wednesday voiced skepticism that federal law can require hospitals to provide emergency abortion care in states with strict laws against the procedure, the latest legal battle over abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned almost two years ago.
- An investigator working for Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said in court that prosecutors consider Donald Trump and other former aides “unindicted co-conspirators” in the fake electors plot being investigated by the state.
- The Justice Department may decide by early June whether to proceed with criminal charges against Boeing over two fatal crashes of two 737 Max jetliners that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019. The latest mishap for the plane maker – the midair blowout out of a door plug in January – has sparked a criminal probe of its practices and the tearing up of the deferred-prosecution agreement over the crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia.
- The Justice Department is investigating the firm McKinsey for possible criminal wrongdoing related to its work advising opioid manufacturers and has empaneled a grand jury. — WSJ
- Business groups are suing over the FTC’s rule banning noncompetes.
EconomyEuropean Commission President Ursula von der Leyen suggested new tariffs on Chinese-made cars were in the offing in remarks at a campaign event in Germany ahead of European Parliament elections. Polls- President Biden and Donald Trump are in a dead heat for the presidency nationally according to Quinnipiac — even when the poll is adjusted to include independent and third party contenders.
- Trump is up over Biden by two percentage points in Florida, according to a survey from the University of North Florida’s Public Opinion Research Lab out this morning. The Biden campaign has set its sights on the state because of the state’s six-week abortion ban.
On the TrailThe Trump campaign will host a donor retreat next week in Palm Beach, Fla., that will feature prominent Republicans widely viewed as possible running mates. – Politico National SecurityThe Center for Strategic and International Studies is launching a new program focused on critical minerals. The think tank’s director Gracelin Baskaran told Semafor that they view “minerals security as a national security issue, not just an economic or energy issue.” Foreign Policy- Hamas released video footage of an Israeli-American hostage who was badly wounded during the Oct. 7 attack (the film is undated).
- Pope Francis is pleading for worldwide peace amid the ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza, telling CBS News that “a negotiated peace is better than a war without end.”
- Russia vetoed a UN resolution calling on nations not to place nuclear weapons in space.
- Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for a level playing field for US companies in China as he began his trip in Shanghai. — Reuters
Ambassador Nicholas Burns/XTechnologyCalifornia Sen. Laphonza Butler is warning that a ban on TikTok would jeopardize thousands of jobs in the US — Politico Media- Devin Nunes, the CEO of Trump Media and former California congressman, is pushing House Republicans to investigate “anomalous trading” by professional market participants betting on declines of stock of the Truth Social parent.
- NPR chief Katherine Maher says the network should be open to criticism but defended it against allegations from longtime editor Uri Berliner that it has allowed liberal views to influence its coverage. – WSJ
Big ReadThe United Auto Workers’ next target for unionization in the South is Mercedes-Benz’s plant in Vance, Ala. Some workers are hopeful, according to NBC News. Others aren’t ready to join. “We’ve got the lead,” says a measurement machinist at the Alabama factory, adding that he and other workers have been required to watch videos critical of union membership while management has limited group discussions of the issues. Meanwhile, a worker at a Honda plant in Ohio remains wary of the UAW due to his father’s experiences at a GM supplier in the 1990s. “Maybe if there was an offshoot of another [union] that was created, but I don’t necessarily trust the characters and actors from that organization,” he says. UAW chief Shawn Fain this week reached out to members who question the union’s Southern strategy, saying, “This ain’t charity, this is power.” BlindspotStories that are being largely ignored by either left-leaning or right-leaning outlets, according to data from our partners at Ground News. What the Left isn’t reading: Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., claimed the House Sergeant at Arms threatened to fine him over a video he took on the House floor of members celebrating the Ukraine aid vote this past weekend. What the Right isn’t reading: The Gateway Pundit is filing for bankruptcy amid defamation lawsuits. Principals TeamEditors: Benjy Sarlin, Jordan Weissmann, Morgan Chalfant Editor-at-Large: Steve Clemons Reporters: Kadia Goba, Joseph Zeballos-Roig, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |