It’s a Texas-centric news day here in Washington. IN MEMORIAM: Rep. Sylvester Turner (D-Texas) has died at age 70, Houston Mayor John Whitmire announced this morning, per the Houston Chronicle’s Abby Church and Peter Warren. Turner served as mayor of Houston from 2016–2024, and was elected to the House in November — filling the seat previously held by the late Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee. Turner was a proud Houston native, and spent more than 35 years representing his hometown in office. “He grew up in Acres Homes as the sixth oldest of nine children. Turner graduated as valedictorian from Klein High School before attending the University of Houston and Harvard Law School,” the Chronicle writes. Sylvester attended last night’s joint session. “I can't believe it,” said Rep. Al Green, a fellow Texas Dem. “We were on the floor together last night. You never know for whom the bell will toll next." SPEAKING OF GREEN: Following Green’s heckling disruptions during last night’s joint session speech by President Donald Trump, members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus are looking to formally censure the congressman for his behavior, POLITICO’s Ben Leonard and Meredith Lee Hill report. Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) introduced a censure resolution today. When read it by HuffPost’s Arthur Delaney, Green had a frank reaction: “My response is, ‘Guilty,’” he said. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries declined to comment on Green’s behavior when asked by reporters today, per POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu. “We’re going to keep the focus on the American people — that's where the focus should be,” Jeffries said. Minority Whip Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) was also eager to move on to other topics: “Let's not talk about decorum when the plot is exposed and reiterated every single day.” ON THE BORDER: VP JD Vance will visit an immigration processing location in Eagle Pass, Texas, this afternoon as the Trump administration continues to tout its crackdown on illegal immigration along the U.S.-Mexico border. Vance will be joined by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. A look at recent numbers from the U.S. Customs and Border Control shows that there continues to be a sharp decline of migrant encounters and drug seizures on the border, and statistics sit at near-historic lows, El Paso Times’ Jeff Abbott reports. “There were 4,871 encounters with migrants between ports of entry in West Texas and southern New Mexico in January 2025, according to data from CBP. This trend looks to have continued through February 2025, with agents averaging between 50 to 60 migrants per day, a spokesperson for the Border Patrol El Paso Sector said.” The decline continues a trend that began during the Biden administration. Vance’s trip to the Lone Star State comes a day after a Texas refugee aid group sued the Trump administration for freezing federal funds used in the state’s refugee resettlement programs, per The Texas Tribune’s Uriel Garcia. Related read: “Immigrant labor fuels US economy but Trump's crackdown mostly ignores it,” by AP’s Tim Sullivan and Rebecca Boone. TRUMP ON THE WORLD STAGE — A head-spinning array of action from President Trump has left world leaders scrambling to respond on topics ranging from tariffs to intelligence-sharing to national sovereignty. Here’s the latest: CANADA: Canadian PM Justin Trudeau and Trump spoke late this morning about the tit-for-tat tariffs being volleyed between Washington and Ottawa. Trudeau said he is not willing to lift Canada’s retaliatory efforts against the U.S. goods so long as Trump continues with his 25 percent tariffs against imports from Canada, AP’s Rob Gillies reports. In welcome news for the industrial midwest, Trump is considering potentially “delaying tariffs on North American-built vehicles by 30 days,” Reuters’ David Shepardson reports. “Automakers have offered to boost U.S. auto investments but want certainty about tariff and environmental policies, the sources added, noting that Trump could on April 2 impose additional tariffs that could drastically impact U.S. auto production.” GREENLAND: Greenland PM Múte Bourup Egede is quickly biting back after Trump’s proclaimed U.S. will acquire the country “one way or the other” in last night’s joint address. “Kalaallit Nunaat is ours,” Edgede wrote in a Facebook post this morning, using the Greenlandic name for the island. “The Americans and their leader must understand that. We are not for sale and cannot simply be taken. Our future will be decided by us in Greenland.” More from POLITICO’s Amanda Friedman UKRAINE: “The United States has paused major portions of its intelligence-sharing with Ukraine, squeezing the flow of vital information that Kyiv has used to repel invading Russian forces and strike back at select targets inside Russia,” WaPo’s Warren Strobel, Siobhán O'Grady, Ellen Nakashima and Kostiantyn Khudov report. The halt comes just days after President Trump froze weapons deliveries to Ukraine and less than a week after Trump, Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy got into an explosive discussion in the Oval Office. Why now? The Trump team is using the halt as a tool to push Ukraine to the negotiating table vis-a-vis Russia, POLITICO’s Jack Detsch, Matt Honeycombe-Foster, Joe Gould and Paul McLeary report. “President Trump is going to hold everyone accountable to drive peace around the world,” CIA Director John Ratcliffe said in an interview this morning on Fox News. GAZA: In an unprecedented move, the Trump administration has been holding direct closed-door talks with Hamas over the potential release of U.S. hostages held in Gaza and the “the possibility of a broader deal to end the war,” Axios’ Barak Ravid scoops. The U.S. has “never before engaged directly with Hamas, which it designated a terrorist organization in 1997.” The conversations reportedly took place without buy-in from Israel, which “learned about aspects of the talks through other channels,” Ravid writes. Hostage update: As of now, “59 hostages are still held by Hamas in Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces have confirmed 35 of them are dead. Israeli intelligence believes 22 hostages are still alive, and the status of two others is unknown. … Among the remaining hostages are five Americans including one, 21-year-old Edan Alexander, who is believed to be alive.” CHINA: As Trump's ramps up his trade war against Beijing, the Chinese government released its annual economic plan, laying out an optimistic view of the nation’s economy but giving “scant indication of how the economy would get there without another surge in exports this year,” NYT’s Alexandra Stevenson and Keith Bradsher report from Beijing. The report comes a day after the Chinese embassy in the U.S. warned it was ready to fight "any type" of war in the wake of Trump’s tariffs. Good Wednesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at birvine@politico.com.
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