 Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: A new NRCC poll shown to the House Republican Conference yesterday argues that Republicans “are in a strong position to defend and grow the House majority heading into 2026.” Playbook: President Trump’s popularity is declining among swing-state voters; research from the Democratic group Navigator looks at three swing-state focus groups and shows voters “angry and disappointed at the impact of Trump’s tariff policies.” WaPo: Kamala Harris will use her first major public address since leaving office later today to attack Trump’s economic agenda and “encourage Americans to stand up to the Trump administration and praise those who have protested against him.” White House- Pressed by ABC’s Terry Moran in an Oval Office interview that aired Tuesday night, President Trump downplayed the risk of economic pain stemming from his levies on China. The interview also got into an extended back-and-forth over mistakenly deported man Kilmar Ábrego García’s right to due process, and Trump insisted Ábrego’s hands were tattooed with MS-13 symbols, which experts dispute. Trump also said he “could” get Ábrego back.
- A DOGE staffer who is helping dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau owns hundreds of thousands of dollars in stock in companies that would be subject to CFPB oversight. — ProPublica
Congress- The House Financial Services Committee will mark up its portion of the GOP’s tax bill this morning, which would shrink the level of funding the CFPB can receive from the Federal Reserve and, as Eleanor scooped Friday, eliminate the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board’s ability to collect tax-deductible fees by absorbing it into the SEC.
Outside the Beltway Evelyn Hockstein/ReutersBusiness- President Trump called Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to complain about a report from Punchbowl News that the online marketplace planned to highlight tariff charges in some of its listings.
- The Port of Los Angeles expects shipments to decline by 35% next week because of tariffs on Chinese goods.
Economy- The UK and India are close to agreeing to a trade deal. — Politico
 Education- A Harvard task force issued scathing reports about antisemitism and anti-Arab, anti-Muslim and anti-Palestinian bias at the university, leading university president Alan Garber to apologize for the university failing “to meet the high expectations we rightfully set for our community.”
National Security- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ended the Pentagon’s participation in the Women, Peace, and Security program, an initiative codified by a law signed by President Trump in 2017. Hegseth called it “yet another woke divisive/social justice/Biden initiative that overburdens our commanders and troops.”
- The State Department plans to designate Haitian gangs as foreign terrorist organizations, potentially the first step in allowing the administration to invoke the Alien Enemies Act to justify deporting people with alleged gang ties. — AP
Immigration- The Post Office’s law enforcement agency is cooperating with immigration authorities to find and deport undocumented immigrants. — WaPo
- A former Customs and Border Protection official warned lawmakers in a letter not to back President Trump’s pick to lead the agency, Rodney Scott, and accused him of a “cover-up” in the death of a man in CBP custody. Scott is set to go before the Senate Finance Committee today. — The Guardian
Foreign Policy- The Trump administration imposed sanctions on Chinese and Iranian firms that allegedly supported Iran’s ballistic missile program.
- Secretary of State Marco Rubio is considering eliminating the role of US security coordinator for the West Bank and Gaza. — Axios
- China’s foreign minister told a Rio de Janeiro meeting of the BRICS bloc that Beijing’s stance against US trade pressure was in “the common interest of all countries.”
Environment- The EPA is cancelling hundreds of Biden-era environmental justice grants.
Principals TeamEdited by Morgan Chalfant, deputy Washington editor With help from Elana Schor, senior Washington editor And Graph Massara, copy editor Contact our reporters: Burgess Everett, Kadia Goba, Eleanor Mueller, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |