 Beltway Newsletters Punchbowl News: Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he believes Democrats have decided to force a government shutdown because “they see it as politically advantageous” and “they want a fight with the Trump administration.” Playbook: FBI Director Kash Patel, already under fire over the Jeffrey Epstein case, is coming under fresh pressure from across the political spectrum due to his handling of the hunt for Charlie Kirk’s killer. Axios: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick says President Trump is planning a major drive to cut the price of prescription drugs within weeks. WaPo: Trump’s appearance at a Yankees game yesterday is part of his effort to become a cultural figure rather than just a political figure, which he knows “will expand his legacy.” Congress- Senate Republicans advanced a change to the Senate rules allowing batches of nominees to be confirmed in a single vote and will approve the first batch next week, Burgess Everett reports.
- Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee are demanding JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon testify on his bank’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Outside the BeltwayInside the Beltway- The law firm Skadden Arps has discussed doing unpaid legal work for the Heritage Foundation. — FT
BusinessEconomy- The White House moved to appeal a decision barring Fed Governor Lisa Cook from being fired.
- The average 30-year mortgage rate fell to its lowest level in a year, at 6.35%.
 CourtsNational Security- A series of bomb threat hoaxes rattled historically Black colleges across the South.
- An officer mistakenly shot one person at the US Naval Academy in Maryland, after a false report of an active shooter.
- Michigan’s lieutenant governor fled a “credible” bomb threat at his house.
Immigration People mourn Kirk outside the US embassy in Madrid. - The State Department will take action against foreign nationals in the US who seem to be “praising, rationalizing or making light of” Charlie Kirk’s shooting.
- President Trump temporarily delayed the repatriation of hundreds of South Korean workers from a Hyundai plant in order to see if they could be made to train Americans instead. — WaPo
Foreign PolicyTechnology- Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and co-founder Jack Clark will head to Washington on Monday to meet with lawmakers.
- The FTC opened a probe into AI “character” chatbots popular with children.
MediaPrincipals 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 |