 Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: Senate Majority Leader John Thune is staring down his next test — balancing “a vengeful president, unhappy conservatives, worried GOP moderates and Democrats, all while seeking to protect the Senate’s institutional power and his own majority.” Playbook: MAGA might be moving the Republican Party away from its usual party line on Israel. “It seems that for the under-30-year-old MAGA base, Israel has almost no support, and [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s attempt to save himself politically by dragging America in deeper to another Middle East war has turned off a large swath of older MAGA diehards,” Steve Bannon said. WaPo: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries will visit Texas tomorrow to meet with Democrats and strategize about Republican attempts to redistrict the state. Axios: Democrats are optimistic about winning back the House next year, despite historic levels of unpopularity. White House- The Office of Personnel Management released a memo encouraging religious expression among federal workers, including “conversations … including attempting to persuade others of the correctness of their religious views.”
- President Trump is amping up the pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin, giving him a deadline of 10 to 12 days to make a ceasefire deal with Ukraine before imposing additional sanctions.
Congress- Sen. Dick Durbin demanded the Justice Department produce recordings and transcripts of recent interviews Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche conducted with Epstein associate Ghislane Maxwell.
Outside the Beltway- Twenty-one states sued to block the Agriculture Department’s collection of food stamp recipients’ personal information, such as their immigration status.
Campaigns Business- The Commerce Department may soon charge patent holders a sizable fee in order to raise government revenue. — WSJ
Economy- A federal judge denied an attempt by a Trump-linked investment fund to force the Federal Reserve to allow the public to attend meetings of a committee that helps set interest rates.
Education Brian Snyder/Reuters- Harvard University is considering offering the Trump administration up to $500 million to settle a probe into alleged civil rights violations and what the administration describes as antisemitism. — NYT
- The Trump administration is investigating Duke University and its law journal along similar lines. — CNN
Courts- The Justice Department has filed a misconduct complaint against Justice James Boasberg, the jurist in charge of the Kilmar Ábrego García case.
- Ghislane Maxwell is appealing her sex-trafficking convictions to the Supreme Court.
National Security- Pentagon employees are frustrated by a new rule banning them from participating in think tank events. — Politico
- The White House officially accepted an “unconditional donation” of a Qatari jet to be the new Air Force One; the costs to renovate it are classified. — ABC
Foreign Policy- A federal trade court is allowing President Trump’s decision ending the “de minimis” tariff exemption to stand, at least for now — a blow to sellers of low-cost imported goods like Temu and Shein.
- Two senior EU Commission officials admitted Europe has no ability to force the $600 billion in private-sector US investment the bloc promised as part of its recent trade deal.
Media- President Trump is seeking the deposition of Rupert Murdoch in his ongoing defamation case against The Wall Street Journal over its reporting on a risqué birthday letter signed by Trump and sent to Jeffrey Epstein.
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, Eleanor Mueller, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |