Playbook PM: Jan. 6 committee subpoenas McCarthy

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May 12, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eugene Daniels and Garrett Ross

Presented by

PhRMA

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., pauses during a television interview as the House considers President Joe Biden's $1.85 trillion-and-growing domestic policy package, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Nov. 5, 2021. The hard-fought social policy and climate-change legislation will still have to clear the 50-50-Senate, where revisions are likely and Biden has no votes to spare. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The Jan. 6 select committee on Thursday took the extraordinary step of issuing subpoenas to House lawmakers, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

SIREN — The Jan. 6 select committee issued subpoenas today to five House lawmakers: GOP Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY and Reps. SCOTT PERRY (R-Pa.), JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio), ANDY BIGGS (R-Ariz.) and MO BROOKS (R-Ala.). More from Kyle Cheney and Nicholas WuThe letter sent to McCarthy

This is a huge escalation by the committee, one it had been debating for months. Among the concerns is the precedent that it sets, and the potential for Republicans to return in kind if, as expected, they take control of the House after the midterms. The committee is also prepping for a slate of primetime hearings that are expected next month.

BREAKING — "Federal prosecutors have begun a grand jury investigation into whether classified White House documents that ended up at former President DONALD J. TRUMP's Florida home were mishandled," NYT's Maggie Haberman and Michael Schmidt report.

"The intensifying inquiry suggests that the Justice Department is examining the role of Mr. Trump and other officials in his White House in their handling of sensitive materials during the final stages of his administration. … Prosecutors issued a subpoena to the National Archives and Records Administration to obtain the boxes of classified documents, according to the two people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. The authorities have also made interview requests to people who worked in the White House in the final days of Mr. Trump's presidency, according to one of the people."

PSAKI'S EXIT INTERVIEW — Outgoing White House press secretary JEN PSAKI participated in an on-the-record session with reporters hosted by the Christian Science Monitor as she gets ready for her final briefings. Some of her answers that caught our attention:

  • The hardest part of the job: "I've had threats. I have had nasty letters, texts to me with my personal address, the names of my children. It crosses the line and that's when it becomes a little scary and that has been the most personally difficult aspect of this job. … People can like me, dislike me; that's okay. I believe very much in freedom of speech. My kids are 6 and 4. And I worry about their safety."
  • The moment she wishes she could do over: Seeming flippant when asked about sending Covid-19 tests to every American: "It was by about the ninth version of the question … [I] just hit my limit. … We're all human, but it is your job to control that urge and to always provide information, context, all the details. And that was a good lesson for me and a good reminder."
  • What she regrets about messaging on Build Back Better: "Looking back, it was necessary to spend a lot of time having meetings in the Oval Office, but that is … not an effective way to communicate. And it allows disagreements between members of Congress — which frankly, the American public does not care at all about — to dominate what we talked about. And hindsight is always 20/20, but I wish we'd spent more time with the president on the trail."

ON THE HILL — Speaker NANCY PELOSI said at her weekly news conference that the House will bring forward a bill on oil price-gouging next week, and turned her attention to a number of other major issues. Highlights:

  • On the Senate's ongoing discussions of a bipartisan abortion-rights bill being worked on by Sens. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine) and LISA MURKOWSKI (R-Alaska): "It's not enough to pass a bill to have a compromise. It's not a compromise," Pelosi said. "What's in the Republican bill would enable states to do very destructive things when it comes to women's right to choose."
  • On Covid aid: "Those discussions continue. We must pass Covid [aid], it is absolutely essential to the health and well being of the American people," Pelosi said. She said the request will start at $22.5 billion, which matches the White House's latest ask, and is well over Republicans' $10 billion figure. "Since the $10 billion was discussed, the threat has increased," she said.
  • On the baby formula shortage: "Right now the baby is crying; the baby is hungry. We need to address it right now. I think we have good focus on it. We'll see what the president has to say."
  • On her endorsement of Rep. HENRY CUELLAR (D-Texas): "He's a valued member of our caucus. The FBI has said he is not under investigation," and it will be up to constituents to decide, she said. Pelosi also noted that Cuellar is the rare elected Dem who is not supportive of abortion rights, but that they "didn't need him" to pass their abortion rights bill.

MEANWHILE, Dems seem to be a little peeved after a marathon voting day on Wednesday. @sarahnferris: "After a 22-votes-in-a-row day yesterday, lots of process complaints in Dems' whip meeting this morning, attendees tell @nicholaswu12 & me. Frustration has been building over Republicans forcing floor votes on noncontroversial bills. Takes a LOT of floor time."

Good Thursday afternoon.

 

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ICYMI: A majority of Americans reject so-called government "negotiation" once they learn it could restrict access and choice and chill the innovation of new treatments and cures. The survey also shows a majority find health care coverage costs unreasonable and a top priority health care issue for policymakers to address today.

 

THE WHITE HOUSE

THE GROWING FORMULA FIGHT — Reuters' @jeffmason1 : "WH official: @POTUS will speak with retailers and infant formula manufacturers to receive an update on efforts to make infant formula supply more available to American families. Later today the WH will announce new actions the administration is taking to address this issue."

This issue has emerged as a major point of contention, as Republicans are increasingly pushing the administration on it — a group of House Republicans held a news conference about the issue outside the Capitol earlier today and sent a letter to the Biden administration and FDA to "immediately" address the shortage, Fox News' Marisa Schultz reports.

Here's the context: "Baby-formula manufacturers and retailers say they are working to address a long-running shortage in products on store shelves but the hardships facing U.S. families may take months to abate," WSJ's Annie Gasparro and Jaewon Kang write.

JUDICIARY SQUARE

THE SCOTUS SHIFT — NYT's Adam Liptak writes that, increasingly, the "bare-knuckled partisan fights over recent Supreme Court confirmations appear to have followed the justices to their chambers. The disclosure of a draft opinion that would overrule Roe v. Wade, along with related reports of the court's internal workings, has transformed a decorous and guarded institution into one riven by politics."

As the court meets today in a private conference, we wonder: will reporters hear about the discussion? (AP's Mark Sherman and Jessica Gresko have more on today's meeting.)

— Meanwhile, @joshgerstein: "In recent days, court has again quietly pushed back public re-opening, now 'til June. Also the in-person opinion release days that were skedded this month are gone. All subject to change of course."

— And a heads up, via Bloomberg's @GregStohr: "Supreme Court says Monday will be an opinion day, starting at 10. (No, I wouldn't expect the abortion ruling, but a Second Amendment decision isn't out of the question.) We'll also have the scheduled orders list at 9:30."

PROTEST PROFILE —The Atlantic's Elaine Godfrey reports from the protests outside of Justice BRETT KAVANAUGH's house in Chevy Chase, Md.: "It's impossible to know what Kavanaugh was thinking while the gaggle of mostly women paced in front of his lush suburban lawn, just across the border from D.C. Maybe he wasn't even home, or maybe, as some marchers wondered aloud, he was watching them from a small gap in the blinds upstairs. Ultimately, the demonstrators didn't care all that much how the second-newest Supreme Court justice felt about their presence. They had given up on persuasion, they said. Instead, they viewed their protest as a physical reminder for the justices of the human cost of their decision."

— But Virginia Gov. GLENN YOUNGKIN and Maryland Gov. LARRY HOGAN are "demanding that Attorney General MERRICK GARLAND enforce a federal law that forbids demonstrations intended to sway judges on pending cases," WaPo's Laura Vozzella, Erin Cox and Dan Morse write.

 

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ALL POLITICS

TURNING THE SCREWS — The sudden rise of KATHY BARNETTE in the Pennsylvania GOP Senate race has former President DONALD TRUMP sweating. As the primary enters its final week, Trump is trying to head off another potential loss for one of his endorsed candidates — this time MEHMET OZ. "For the past five months, he's been told the only threat to Oz is named DAVID MCCORMICK. This is a twist no one saw coming," a Trump adviser told CNN's Gabby Orr . "The former President is still determining whether there is anything he can do to give Oz an extra boost in the race, the adviser to Trump said, noting that Trump was already planning to host a tele-rally and to target Republican voters with robocalls before the primary. …

"Inside Trump's orbit, Barnette's swift rise from obscurity to a legitimate competitor is seen as a direct result of the mud-slinging contest that has unfolded between Oz and McCormick over the past several months. It's a classic case of a candidate running up the middle, said allies of the former President, with one likening Barnette to Sen. DEB FISCHER, whose bare-bones campaign defeated two well-funded tea party darlings in the 2012 Nebraska GOP Senate primary."

CASH DASH — Sen. RAPHAEL WARNOCK (D-Ga.) is continuing to scorch the fundraising trail. "He'll report raising nearly $5.6 million between April 1 and May 4 in a special federal filing he's set to submit on Thursday. More than 113,000 donors gave to his campaign, giving the Democrat an average of $37.63 a pop," the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Greg Bluestein reports.

CONGRESS

SAVE THE DATE — Former VP MIKE PENCE is planning a visit to the Republican Study Committee on June 21. Our colleague Kyle Cheney notes: "This is in the middle of the public hearing schedule for the Jan. 6 select committee."

THE ECONOMY

INFLATION NATION — Biden's American Rescue Plan was intended to put money back in the pockets of Americans. "But did it contribute to the country's current inflationary mess?" Vox's Andrew Prokop writes. Economists seem to think so — but the question is to what degree.

THE UNEMPLOYMENT PICTURE — "The number of Americans applying for jobless aid ticked up slightly last week but the total number of Americans collecting benefits remained at its lowest level in more than five decades," AP's Matt Ott writes. "The four-week average for claims, which evens out some of the weekly ups and downs, rose 4,250 from the previous week to 192,750."

THE PANDEMIC

WHAT'S HAPPENING AT THE WHITE HOUSE SUMMIT — U.S. and global leaders announced $3.1 billion in new funding for the global Covid fight at the White House's Covid summit today, Erin Banco, Carmen Paun and Daniel Payne report. The new pot of aid comes as Congress failed to approve a round of $5 billion in aid.

— In remarks delivered at the opening of the summit, Biden told world leaders: "Now is the time for us to act. All of us together. We all must do more. We must honor those we have lost by doing everything we can to prevent as many deaths as possible." Earlier today, Biden ordered flags to be flown at half-staff to honor the 1 million Covid deaths. NYT has more

 

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BEYOND THE BELTWAY

GOING IT ALONE — Absent any action from congressional Democrats on their campaign promises to working parents, state legislatures are taking matters into their own hands on a number of key agenda items. "From Connecticut to New Mexico, progressive elected officials in recent months have moved to defray the high cost of child care, create paid leave programs for new parents or those caring for loved ones, and salvage other parts of the Democratic agenda at risk of dying from inaction in Congress as November's midterm elections get closer," Nick Niedzwiadek writes.

WAR IN UKRAINE

— "Finland's leaders announced on Thursday that their country should 'apply for NATO membership without delay,' while Swedish leaders are expected to do the same within days. It is a remarkable shift by two nations on Russia's doorstep that had long remained nonaligned militarily — but where public opinion has lurched strongly toward joining the alliance in the 11 weeks since Russia invaded Ukraine," NYT's Shashank Bengali, Steven Erlanger and Ivan Nechepurenko report. (Pentagon spox JOHN KIRBY praised the "historic" move, per Quint Forgey.)

But Russia was quick to respond, warning Finland of potential retaliation if it goes through with the decision, per CNN.

— Video investigation, via WSJ: "Dozens of Ukrainian civilians were killed on one four-mile stretch of road outside Kyiv during the month of March. A WSJ analysis of videos, photos and social media posts reveals how Russian forces positioned themselves around the road to fire on and kidnap fleeing civilians."

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FOR YOUR RADAR — The families of four U.S. citizens who are imprisoned in Iran are pleading with the Biden administration to step in and secure a safe return home, WSJ's Stephen Kalin reports . The four Americans were detained on espionage charges, and the increased pressure on Biden to act comes "as nuclear talks with Tehran that were expected to include their release have stalled."

PLAYBOOKERS

OUT AND ABOUT — The March of Dimes Gala on Wednesday evening at the National Building Museum featured several dozen members of Congress competing as celebrity chefs in a cook-off of appetizers, desserts and drinks. The event raised more than $1.3 million for the March of Dimes. There was a surprise visit from Paris Hilton, who stopped by Sen. Rand Paul's (R-Ky.) booth, where he'd made sausage stuffed mushrooms. Pic of Hilton with Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Calif.) Paul and sausage-stuffed mushrooms

The winners … Judge's Choice: Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) for his sausage poppers with dill dip … People's Choice: Sen. Angus King (I-Vt.) for his lobster stew … Healthiest Recipe: Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.) for his shrimp ceviche … Hometown Hero: Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) for his Italian cream cake … Best Presentation: Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D-Texas) for her campechana de mariscos seafood cocktail … Easiest Preparation: Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) for his crispy, no-fry potato pancake poppers with garlic aioli dip.

Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei hosted the annual Media for Liberty award reception Wednesday evening at District Winery. USA Today's Susan Page received the honor, which goes to journalists who "shine a light on untold or misunderstood stories." She donated her $50,000 award to the emergency fund of the International Women's Media Foundation. SPOTTED: Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) and Robin Hickenlooper, Sens. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Elaine Chao, Andrea Mitchell, Major Garrett, Paul Beckett and Heather Timmons.

Democratic/progressive digital ad firm DSPolitical celebrated its 10th anniversary (a couple of Covid years delayed) with a big party for about 200 people Wednesday night at Calico in Blagden Alley. SPOTTED: Mark Jablonowski, Eli Kaplan, Michael Bassik and Eloise Lepesqueur.

 

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DUP’s Emma Little Pengelly co-opted to replace Sir Jeffrey Donaldson as MLA for Lagan Valley

DUP will decide tomorrow whether to nominate Stormont Speaker – Donaldson
 
 
     
   
     
  May 12, 2022  
     
     
  DUP's Emma Little Pengelly co-opted as MLA for Lagan Valley  
DUP's Emma Little Pengelly co-opted as MLA for Lagan Valley
     
 
DUP will decide tomorrow whether to nominate Stormont Speaker – Donaldson
DUP will decide tomorrow whether to nominate Stormont Speaker – Donaldson
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
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California Today: Who will seek abortions here?

The state is preparing for an influx of patients.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. California is preparing for an influx of abortion patients if Roe v. Wade falls. Plus, a wildfire destroys homes in Orange County.

Planned Parenthood workers showing support for women's health rights protesters during a march and rally last week.Caroline Brehman/EPA, via Shutterstock

In anticipation of Roe v. Wade being overturned and abortion quickly becoming illegal in at least a dozen states, California is gearing up to become the nation's abortion provider.

About one out of six abortions in the U.S. are already performed in California, a figure that's expected to rise as access constricts elsewhere. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday proposed a spending plan that includes $40 million in grants to offset the cost of abortions for uninsured women from both inside and outside the state.

"We're going to fight like hell, making sure that all women — not just those in California — know that this state continues to recognize and protect their fundamental rights," the governor said in a statement.

Twenty-eight states are expected to ban or tightly restrict access to abortion if the landmark 1973 ruling is overturned, as a leaked draft opinion by the Supreme Court indicates. Democrats in the Senate tried and failed on Wednesday to push forward legislation that would have safeguarded abortion rights nationwide.

So California, as the nation's most populous state and one with the fewest barriers to abortion, is likely to see a major influx of patients if Roe falls, experts say.

Already, the number of out-of-state patients seeking abortions in California has jumped in recent months.

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After Texas' rollout of the nation's strictest abortion law, the number of women from other states showing up at Planned Parenthood clinics in Orange and San Bernardino Counties increased to 20 per month from four per month, the chapter's medical director, Dr. Janet Jacobson, said.

Last week, a 26-year-old mother from El Paso arrived at the Planned Parenthood health center in Orange for an abortion. She had left her children with her sister, gotten in her car after work and driven through the night to reach the clinic.

"That is a 750-mile drive — for a five-minute procedure," Jacobson told me. "Those stories are no longer unusual for us."

Jacobson's Planned Parenthood chapter has started a program that helps defray the costs of lodging and travel for patients seeking abortions. There's a proposal in the State Legislature that would set up a similar program at the state level, part of a package of 13 bills that would make abortions easier to get in California.

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If Roe were to be overturned, the number of out-of-state women whose nearest abortion provider would be in California would jump to 1.4 million from 46,000, according to a report from The Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

That figure doesn't include women who may have clinics closer to their homes, but choose to come to California because there are fewer barriers to care here or because the clinics near them are overwhelmed. In other words, it doesn't account for the women from Texas already choosing to come to California.

"We know that people, especially as wide swaths of the country become hostile to abortion services, will chose to fly rather than drive," Brandon Richards, spokesman for Planned Parenthood of California, said.

But there will remain people who cannot afford to travel to California or other abortion-friendly states.

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Before the pandemic, Dr. Moira Rashad regularly traveled from the Bay Area to Phoenix to perform abortions there. She pointed out that in Arizona and elsewhere, women who seek abortions are more likely to be poor, so it's difficult for them to take time off work or afford travel to California.

"These laws always more heavily impact marginalized communities," Rashad told me. "It's something we've kind of been anticipating would happen since this case got to the Supreme Court, and it's still so devastating."

For more:

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If you read one story, make it this

A customer holding an AR-15-style rifle displayed for sale at the Crossroads of the West Gun Show last year.Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The rest of the news

  • Second Amendment: A U.S. appeals court ruled on Wednesday that California's ban on sales of semiautomatic weapons to adults under 21 is unconstitutional, The Associated Press reports.
  • Reparations for Native Americans: A new fund will help Native American communities preserve tribal history and further California's effort to atone for its history of violence and wrongdoing against Native Americans, CalMatters reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Orange County wildfire: The Coastal fire led to mandatory evacuations as it burned about 200 acres and at least 20 homes in a gated community in Laguna Niguel on Wednesday night, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Immigration help: The L.A. City Council has approved a program providing universal free legal representation to immigrants facing deportation, LAist reports.
  • L.A.'s new watering rules: Los Angeles is reducing outdoor watering to two days per week from three, LAist reports.
  • L.A.U.S.D. vaccine mandate on hold: The Los Angeles Unified School District postponed its Covid-19 vaccination mandate from this fall to next year, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Hearst Castle: After two years of being closed to the public, Hearst Castle began welcoming back guests on Wednesday, KTLA reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

What we're eating

Lemony pasta with asparagus and white beans.

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Cassandra Franklin, who recommends "a small treasure of a museum — Pasadena's Norton Simon":

"On your way into the building, don't rush past the impressive Rodin bronzes (including The Thinker around the corner from the entry path). Their careful placement invites lingering exploration of their full 360 degree magnificence.

Once inside, strolling through the galleries on first floor is like taking a Western art history class. From early Medieval paintings to gems from both the Flemish and Italian Renaissance to stellar later works from the Impressionists and early 20th century. The lower level galleries contain similarly outstanding works from Asia.

When the outdoors calls again, take in the serene greenery, pond, still more sculptures in the back garden, and, perhaps, a tasty snack or beverage. You won't regret the 'off the beaten path' trek to enjoy this visual feast."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

And before you go, some good news

In 2019, Rebecca Longworth and Joan Howard were having dinner with some friends at their home in Berkeley.

During the meal, their guests told them something surreal: They'd just been to the Oakland Museum, where they'd spotted a large image of Longworth and Howard's bright blue building.

The couple were stunned to hear about their friends' discovery. They took a trip to the museum themselves and learned their house used to be a lesbian bar that had been open for decades.

For the queer couple, who run a theater company out of their home, the revelation felt like "an unexpected gift," Howard told Berkeleyside.

Longworth added: "It feels like we're part of its history now, and maybe we're supposed to be part of its history."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Motorized two-wheel transport (5 letters).

Shivani Gonzalez, Danielle Cruz, Briana Scalia and Mariel Wamsley contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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