What you missed in the omnibus

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Dec 20, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

Presented by Binance

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 06: U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) speaks to reporters following the Senate weekly policy luncheons, at the U.S. Capitol on December 06, 2022 in Washington, DC. Congress is working on passing the annual defense spending bill before funding runs out by the end of the year. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell today urged fellow Republicans to vote for the omnibus. | Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

THE WHEELS ON THE OMNIBUS — This morning, we broke down some of the most notable big-ticket inclusions and omissions in the text of the omnibus government spending bill released overnight, from Electoral Count Act reform to Ukraine aid to the expanded child tax credit. But in such a behemoth — appropriating $1.7 trillion over more than 4,000 pages — there are plenty more consequential policy decisions to dig into. Here are some more provisions you should know:

What else is in …

A bipartisan effort to block a tax avoidance scheme via syndicated conservation easements. ProPublica backstory on "The Tax Scam That Won't Die"

— A higher cap for Afghan special immigrant visas, moving from 34,500 to 38,500, and $2.4 billion to reimburse states for supporting Ukrainian refugees.

— A 30% boost for child care spending through the Child Care and Development Block Grant program. That's half the increase that Democrats had sought. More from Eleanor Mueller for Pros

Protections for the Maine lobster industry, for which the state's delegation had fought hard. Unhappiness from whale advocates, via WaPo

— The first major overhaul of cosmetics regulation in 84 years, giving more authority over the market to the FDA. More from Lauren Gardner for Pros

— Significant changes to 401(k) retirement accounts that include allowing Americans to wait until age 75, instead of 72, to start taking out money. Details from the WSJ

— A provision to expand access to summer meals for school children. Background from Food Fix

— A waiver for Boeing to blow past a Dec. 27 deadline for getting its 737 Max models certified. Preview from the FT

— Language to allow ANDRE CARTER and other college stars from the service academies to head to the NFL (or other pro leagues). More from the Military Times

What else is out …

— The Afghan Adjustment Act, which would have saved tens of thousands of Afghan evacuees from the risk of deportation but ran into opposition from Sen. CHUCK GRASSLEY (R-Iowa). Great WaPo feature on the U.S. veterans who fought for it

— Two major antitrust bills aimed at Big Tech, which internet giants spent hundreds of millions of dollars to fight, per Bloomberg.

— The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which would have given more bathroom breaks and other job protections to pregnant workers — and now likely won't become law for years. Background from Eleanor Mueller

— A ban on Huawei from the U.S. banking system.

— The VALID Act, which would have changed the regulation of laboratory developed tests. Rep. CATHY McMORRIS RODGERS (R-Wash.) killed it, David Lim reports for Pros.

WHAT'S NEXT — The Senate will hold a procedural vote on the bill at 2:30 p.m. Will any senators hold it up? Sen. MIKE LEE (R-Utah) today called it "an act of legislative barbarism," but Minority Whip JOHN THUNE (R-S.D.) told reporters he thinks it can pass by Wednesday after some amendment votes. On the floor, Minority Leader MITCH McCONNELL urged fellow Republicans to vote for the omnibus, praising its defense spending plus-up and warning that failure would "give our armed forces confusion and uncertainty."

McCARTHY COMING IN HOT — House GOP Leader KEVIN McCARTHY, trying to shore up conservative backing for his speaker bid, threw his support behind the 13 House Republicans who said they'd tank any policy priorities of GOP senators who vote for the omnibus. "Agreed," McCarthy tweeted. "Except no need to whip — when I'm Speaker, their bills will be dead on arrival in the House if this nearly $2T monstrosity is allowed to move forward over our objections and the will of the American people."

Good Tuesday afternoon, and thanks for reading Playbook PM. What other under-the-radar omnibus provisions caught your eye? Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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CONGRESS

PULL UP A CHAIR — Incoming House Democratic Leader HAKEEM JEFFRIES is expected to tap Rep. SUZAN DelBENE (D-Wash.) as the next DCCC chair, Punchbowl's Jake Sherman, Heather Caygle, John Bresnahan and Max Cohen report. Though Reps. AMI BERA (D-Calif.) and TONY CÁRDENAS (D-Calif.) were running for the position, concerns about both of them helped prod the caucus to turn the position into a Jeffries nomination instead of an election. (DelBene would still need caucus ratification.) A former frontliner now in a safe seat, DelBene has recently chaired the moderate New Democrat Coalition. She also adds more gender diversity to House Dem leadership.

HAPPENING TODAY — As House Ways and Means meets this afternoon for a consequential decision on DONALD TRUMP's tax returns, NYT's Alan Rappeport writes that a move to release them "would represent both a significant act of transparency and what some fear is the end of an era of taxpayer privacy." Not everybody — even in the Democratic Party — thinks making the returns public is the right choice: "If they get revealed, it seems to me they ought to have a pretty good reason for why that's in the public interest," former IRS Commissioner JOHN KOSKINEN says. "It's a dangerous precedent."

PULLOUT FALLOUT — "GOP's looming Afghanistan probe worries Biden aides," by WaPo's Yasmeen Abutaleb and Dan Lamothe: "While much attention is focused on Republicans' plans to investigate [President JOE] BIDEN's son HUNTER , some White House and other administration officials privately say an Afghanistan probe could prove more emotionally difficult and politically damaging. … They also say they do not expect a big bombshell from any hearings because the episode has been so thoroughly examined."

ALL POLITICS

IT'S ELECTION DAY — Amid a flurry of other news, you might have forgotten that we'll likely know the next member of Congress in short order. Virginia's 4th District, considered a safe Democratic seat, is holding its Democratic "firehouse primary" to replace the late Rep. DONALD McEACHIN, and state Sen. JENNIFER McCLELLAN is seen as the frontrunner, NYT's Maya King reports. State Sen. JOE MORRISSEY is her main competition: A controversial moderate, he's nonetheless earned support from Republicans (for his anti-abortion views) and Black voters (for his criminal justice work), and he's upset the Democratic establishment before.

Caveats from the Richmond Times-Dispatch: Though polls close at 7 p.m., it could take a while to determine the winner. Vote counting won't begin until Wednesday morning. And there are multiple lawsuits in the works alleging unfairness over the party's decision to hold the primary on a Tuesday and with limited polling sites.

2024 WATCH — Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS' political committee this weekend restarted paid ads on social media for the first time since his reelection, FWIW's Kyle Tharp reports. "It's unusual for a term-limited politician to continue running fundraising and email acquisition ads after winning re-election - unless he or she is planning to seek higher office."

 

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TRUMP CARDS

THE SILENCE IS DEAFENING — AP's Steve Peoples clocks a noteworthy development Monday: The House Jan. 6 committee recommended that prosecutors bring criminal charges against Trump, and the Republican blowback was … pretty quiet. The lack of outrage en masse among the GOP stands in contrast to how Republicans have responded to past actions against Trump. "The divergent responses are a sign of how quickly the political landscape has shifted for Trump as he faces a new legal threat and mounts a third bid for the presidency."

MUSK READS

THE TRIBE HAS SPOKEN — After Twitter users told ELON MUSK in an unscientific poll that he should step down as head of the social media company, he is indeed searching for a new CEO, CNBC's David Faber reports. But in some ways, that's not a surprise: Musk previously said that he would be CEO only temporarily, and his search predates the recent poll.

POLICY CORNER

A-COMIN' DOWN THE STREET — The CFPB today announced a $3.7 billion settlement with Wells Fargo over various violations of the law, including $2 billion that will go to customers as restitution. Among the infractions, per NBC's Rob Wile: "Improperly repossessing cars. Erroneously denying mortgage loan modifications. Wrongfully freezing or closing customers' accounts."

BOOGIE WOOGIE WOOGIE — It's electric at the U.S. Postal Service. The agency will spend nearly $10 billion to purchase a next generation of vehicles, 66,000 of which will be electric, WaPo's Jacob Bogage reports. That'll make the Postal Service the owner of "one of the largest electric fleets in the nation," he writes. "It's a major achievement for a White House climate agenda that leans heavily on reducing greenhouse gases from vehicles."

CLEARING THE AIR — That's not the only news at the intersection of the climate and the roads today. The EPA rolled out final new rules that will force buses and large trucks to reduce their pollution five years from now. Aiming to reduce smog and soot from heavy-duty vehicles, the regulation marks the first change to these standards in 21 years. The EPA says it will save 2,900 people from premature deaths. More from CNN

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

WAR REPORT — U.S. Special Operations commandos took six Islamic State officials in Syria raids over the past two days, the military announced. Among those captured was a senior official, known as AL-ZUBAYDI , who the U.S. said helped plan terrorist attacks. "The fact that the Pentagon sent commandos to kill or capture the Islamic State officials, rather than use a less risky drone operation, indicated their significance," notes NYT's Eric Schmitt.

AFTERNOON READ — "How TikTok Became a Diplomatic Crisis," by Alex Palmer in the NYT Magazine: "What often goes unnoticed in these conversations is that TikTok is as much a product of the West as it is of China. ByteDance owes its very existence to the intermingling of ideas, capital and people that defined the last five decades of U.S.-China engagement. … But now the world has changed. In the United States, being tough on China is one of the few areas of bipartisan agreement. … TikTok seems likely to be the last of its kind as well as the first. The company is caught in the middle between the old era and the new — too Chinese for America, too American for China."

— TikTok on the clock: Two top House Republicans, MICHAEL McCAUL (Texas) and MIKE ROGERS (Ala.), told several agencies that they want more info on the national security deal being negotiated with TikTok, WSJ's John McKinnon scooped.

 

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BEYOND THE BELTWAY

BORDER SONG — Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, Texas, has emerged as a major new immigration chokepoint, as a surge of Nicaraguans and other migrants prompts fears of a humanitarian crisis, WSJ's Santiago Pérez reports from the city. "Thousands of migrants … have arrived in Ciudad Juárez in recent days as word spread on social media that U.S. authorities were preparing to take tougher measures to deter illegal crossings."

STICKING TO THEIR GUNS — "In Public Schools, the N.R.A. Gets a Boost From Junior R.O.T.C.," by NYT's Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs and Mike Baker in Cape Coral, Fla.: "Instructors in military-sponsored J.R.O.T.C. classes have offered to promote the N.R.A. in high schools in exchange for money for their marksmanship programs."

PLAYBOOKERS

SPOTTED at Off the Record at the Hay-Adams on Monday night: Alyssa Farah, Stephanie Grisham, Olivia Troye and Sarah Matthews having drinks together in a back booth.

OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at the White House Hanukkah reception on Monday night: AG Merrick Garland, Domestic Policy Council Director Susan Rice, chief of staff Ron Klain, Anne and Yehuda Neuberger, Matt Klapper, Samantha Vinograd, Jonathan Greenblatt, Tanya Mayorkas, Reps. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) and Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), and Israeli Ambassador Michael Herzog.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Office of the USTR is adding Roberto Soberanis as assistant USTR for intergovernmental affairs and public engagement (most recently at the New Jersey Department of Labor), Victor Ban as special counsel (most recently at Covington & Burling), and Angelica Annino as director of scheduling and advance coordinator (most recently at the SEC).

Rachel Ryan McKell has been named senior director in FTI Consulting's energy practice. She most recently was senior manager/deputy head of comms at Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (Masdar).

TRANSITIONS — Graeme Crews is now comms director for Rep. Judy Chu (D-Calif.) and the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. He previously was comms director for the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis under Rep Clyburn, and is a Southern Poverty Law Center alum. … The American Medical Association has added Suzanne Joy and Jeff Coughlin as assistant directors of federal affairs. Joy previously was senior adviser for public policy and regulation at Holland & Knight. Coughlin previously was senior director of federal and state affairs at the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society.

 

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California Today: College corps launches

Students receive $10,000 from the state to pay tuition and living expenses in exchange for 450 hours of community service work.
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By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. California has created its own service program to help low-income college students. Plus, a verdict in the Harvey Weinstein trial in Los Angeles.

Students celebrated in October as they became the first class of the California College Corps Fellows in Sacramento, earning $10,000 for committing one year of community service.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

Of the hundreds of laws signed and initiatives overseen by Gov. Gavin Newsom while in office, a new state program is the one that he's "probably more proud" of than anything else.

The California College Corps, a state program that began this year, selects low-income college students to complete community service in exchange for $10,000 to spend on tuition and living expenses. The aim is to help students reduce their debt, while empowering civic action and addressing problems in the state, including education gaps, food insecurity and climate change.

"Instead of working at a restaurant or a cafe, now you're going to have the chance to tutor, mentor, take climate action, go to food banks and do other important work," California's chief service officer, Josh Fryday, told me. "We really think this is an exciting and unique model, and it's a model that we hope gets emulated by other states and around the country."

The four-year program is funded by approximately $300 million in state money, and about 13,000 students are expected to enroll through 2026.

To select the first class of students this fall, the state partnered with 46 California college campuses, including U.C. Berkeley, Fresno City College and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, for help in choosing students who could most benefit. The inaugural class of 3,200 was sworn in at a ceremony in Sacramento in October.

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Over the course of the academic year, the students will serve 450 hours, which is about 15 hours a week. Half of the fellows are spending that time tutoring and mentoring in low-income schools in an effort to address the state's Covid-driven learning loss, Fryday said. Others are building community gardens, planting trees, working at food banks or participating in other local community-service projects identified by their colleges.

The program's first class includes more than 500 California Dream Act students, who came to the U.S. as undocumented immigrants but otherwise qualify for in-state tuition in California. Typically, undocumented students can't participate in national service programs because federal rules prohibit them from receiving funding.

"It's one of the aspects of the program that we're most proud of," Fryday told me. The class is also mostly composed of first-generation college students, and more than 80 percent are people of color.

Newsom said he hoped community service work would help the college students discover their purpose, "their North Star" that would guide them through their professional and personal lives.

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"Honestly there's nothing that enlivens me more than the fact that you're on your journey to figure it out," he said at the swearing-in ceremony.

The arresting portrait hung in Joan Didion's apartment for years, though she knew little about who painted it, or why.Albert Watson

If you read one story, make it this

The origins of a mysterious painting in Joan Didion's house have finally been revealed.

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Lawyers for Harvey Weinstein sought to highlight discrepancies in accounts by witnesses.Pool photo by Etienne Laurent

The rest of the news

  • Weinstein verdict: After more than nine days of deliberations, jurors convicted the former movie producer Harvey Weinstein on three counts of rape and sexual assault, but acquitted him on one count and could not reach a decision on three more counts.
  • Mushrooms: A bill introduced by mental health professionals and veteran groups would legalize psychedelic drugs, such as "magic mushrooms" and ayahuasca, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Narcan: Assemblyman Matt Haney proposed legislation that would require California bars, public libraries, gas stations and single-room-occupancy hotels to have Narcan kits on hand, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Nature preserve: After a decades-long fight against Orange County, the nonprofit Trust for Public Land completed the purchase of the 384-acre Banning Ranch property, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • City Council: A new poll revealed that only 30 percent of Los Angeles voters had a favorable view of their 15-member City Council, while Karen Bass, the new mayor, held a 47 percent approval rating, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Wildfires: California recently released its latest Fire Hazard Severity Zone map, with Kern County having 641,441 acres ranked very high for wildfire risk, mostly in mountainous areas, The Bakersfield Californian reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Sylvestre Fernandes for Sotheby's International Realty

What you get

For $950,000: A Craftsman-style cottage in Los Angeles, a three-bedroom apartment in San Francisco and a midcentury ranch in Novato.

David Malosh for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Garlicky mashed potato cake.

Trees blanket the grounds of State Capitol Park in Sacramento.Photo By Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Adele Ohs, who recommends Capitol Park in Sacramento:

"I love Capitol Park, the square mile surrounding the State Capitol building. It is a lovely oasis marking the seat of our state government. In it are walks through ancient trees gifted to the state from many countries around the world; granite memorials to the war dead as well as to firefighters and peace officers who have lost their lives protecting citizens of this state; and benches on which to savor the beauty of California's temperate weather. The Peace Rose Garden is one of the loveliest in the state and on sunny days, you will often see wedding parties being photographed there. School buses ring the streets around the park in the spring as children from all over the state come to watch our government in action and sprawl on the lawns with sack lunches. The grounds are a state park, so the security is provided by the California Highway Patrol on horseback; it's a common sight to see mounted officers speaking to interested onlookers or simply standing with their mounts at attention."

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.

Tell us

Have you visited any of the travel destinations that we've recommended in the newsletter? Send us a few lines about your trip, and a photo!

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Waves crashing at Ocean Beach, where three people saved a surfer from nearly drowning early this month.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

On a stormy evening in San Francisco, Monica Gomez and Lucas Moore saw a surfboard floating off Ocean Beach. Then they saw a body facedown beside it.

The couple sprinted toward the water, and asked a bystander — Griffin De Luce — to call 911. Together, the three people dragged the unconscious surfer onto the shore and began CPR. The man's body was cold, his lips blue and his eyes staring blankly.

But then he inhaled a ragged breath and coughed up salt water. He was alive.

When the surfer was later released from the hospital, he reunited with the people who helped rescue him, The San Francisco Chronicle reports. "I'm so grateful to be alive," the surfer, a 56-year-old father of two, said. "It just gave me such an appreciation of life and happiness. I wake up every morning and go to bed happy." (The Chronicle did not name the surfer at his request.)

The four people all met on Dec. 10 at a bakery in Larkspur. They described it as a surreal, overwhelming and emotional experience, with tears and hugs. They're planning to go on a hike together in the East Bay next year.

"We're all connected, friends for life," De Luce said.

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

Briana Scalia and Allison Honors contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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