 Beltway NewslettersPlaybook: Democrats planning rebuttals to President Trump’s State of the Union address include Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, set to be keynote speakers at the “State of the Swamp” at the National Press Club in Washington. WaPo: “The whole idea of DHS was, it was this nonpartisan, non-controversial way to protect the country, and unfortunately, our immigration wars have now overshadowed that,” said Stewart Verdery, a former assistant secretary for policy and planning at the department. Axios: A Pentagon-run competition called the “Gauntlet” will test small, low-cost drones and their manufacturers, part of the Defense Department’s push to rapidly supply US forces with large numbers of expendable drones within a few years. White House- President Trump will host governors at the White House, but without the involvement of the National Governors Association, which withdrew from the meeting after he declined to invite the Democratic governors of Colorado and Maryland.
- A federal panel of Trump’s appointees unexpectedly gave final approval to his ballroom project, which is slated to exceed the White House in size.
- Trump said he will order government agencies to review and release files related to extraterrestrial life and UFOs.
Congress- Democratic leaders on the Hill announced that Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger will deliver their party’s official response to Trump’s State of the Union on Tuesday, while California Sen. Alex Padilla will deliver the response in Spanish.
- The White House is circulating a draft bill to ban large institutional investors from buying single-family homes. — Washington Examiner
Outside the Beltway- Bill Gates canceled his appearance at an artificial intelligence event in India amid scrutiny of prominent figures and their connections to Jeffrey Epstein.
Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images- At the same summit, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei refused to hold hands.
Inside the Beltway- The husband of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer has been barred from the agency’s headquarters in Washington after at least two female staffers reported he’d sexually assaulted them in the building. — NYT
- The advisory firm Global Counsel, which operated in DC, is entering administration after co-founder Peter Mandelson’s ties to Epstein “made it challenging to continue with the business in its current form.”
Campaigns- Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-Texas, alleged a blackmail attempt by the husband of a former aide who killed herself after telling others she was having an affair with Gonzales; the aide’s husband denied the claim as Gonzales’ GOP primary opponent called for his resignation.
Business- Cryptocurrency and banking representatives discussed a compromise on cryptocurrency legislation at the White House Thursday that would allow exchanges to keep paying customers for stablecoins as long as they didn’t base them on account balances, Semafor’s Eleanor Mueller reports.
 - Beef prices are expected to remain elevated for the next few years, despite attempts by the Trump administration to rein them in, according to Agriculture Department data.
- Alternative investment firm Blue Owl Capital sparked jitters in the private credit sector after saying it would liquidate $1.4 billion in assets to pay out investors who now want out. — WSJ
Courts- A judge in New York sided with Democrats hoping to redraw Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis’ district, a decision that likely settles the matter unless the Supreme Court takes up a separate case filed by Republicans to block changes to the state map.
National SecurityImmigrationForeign Policy- Trump is considering a North American trade agreement that excludes Canada.
HealthBig ReadSemafor DC TeamEdited by Morgan Chalfant, deputy Washington editor With help from Elana Schor, senior Washington editor Emily Ford, editor Graph Massara and Marta Biino, copy editors Contact our reporters: Burgess Everett, Eleanor Mueller, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |