Scalise defeats Trump, Jordan

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Oct 11, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Bethany Irvine

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House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., talks to reporters as he leaves Republicans closed-door forum to hear from the candidates for speaker of the House, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2023. House business and most congressional action has come to a standstill after Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was ousted as speaker by conservatives in his own party (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise is now the GOP nominee for House Speaker. | AP

LAISSEZ LES BONS TEMPS ROULER — After days of wrangling and debate, House Republicans have picked their nominee to succeed KEVIN McCARTHY as speaker: House Majority Leader STEVE SCALISE. 

In a 113 to 99 vote, the GOP conference rejected Rep. JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio) — who was, we stress, endorsed by former President DONALD TRUMP — in favor of the Louisiana Republican who has served in leadership for a decade. Also worth noting: the rejection of Trump’s candidate came in a secret-ballot vote.

Good signs abounded for Scalise early into the meeting. In a 135-88 vote, Republicans rejected a proposed rule change introduced by Rep. CHIP ROY (R-Texas) that would have required a GOP speaker candidate to have 217 votes in the conference before advancing to the House floor.

More context from Olivia Beavers: “The vote on Roy's proposal was seen as a test of Scalise's support, because his allies came to view the rules change as a covert effort to block him from becoming the conference’s nominee. … Its rejection means that whoever lands the House GOP's internal nomination will likely face a scramble to secure the needed votes before heading to the floor — or even during the floor proceedings, depending on when Republicans attempt to hold a speaker vote by the full chamber.”

But just because there’s a clear Republican nominee doesn’t mean there’s a clear consensus about the path forward — or even about the status quo.

  • Rep. MAX MILLER (R-Ohio) said that unless Jordan drops out, he will still vote for his fellow Ohioan on the House floor even if Scalise wins the nomination. Should others join in, it could mean multiple voting rounds of floor votes on the speaker.
  • Rep. KEN BUCK (R-Colo.) told reporters he voted “present” during the meeting because both Jordan and Scalise voted to overturn the 2020 election results. “If we don't have the moral clarity to decide whether President [JOE] BIDEN won or not, we don't have the moral clarity to rule,” Buck said. It’s not clear how he plans to vote on the floor.
  • Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) told reporters he’d support Scalise on the floor, calling him an “upgrade” from McCarthy: “I’m excited for him,” Gaetz said. “Long live Speaker Scalise."
  • At least one member is still holding out for a McCarthy speakership: Rep. CARLOS GIMENEZ (R-Fla.) told reporters he is voting for the former speaker until McCarthy tells him otherwise: “I’ve always said I’m a McCarthy guy until he says, ‘Hey don’t vote for anybody else [but Scalise].’”
  • And while Rep. TROY NEHLS (R-Texas) said he voted for Jordan for speaker, he still prefers DONALD TRUMP for the role: “I would imagine if we can't find a speaker after a certain amount of time, I'm going have to come in and bring Donald in here,” Nehls said. 

What now? It’s not clear yet when the House will hold a vote on the floor, but should Scalise be voted in as speaker, the House GOP will have to elect a new majority leader. The House is scheduled to reconvene at 3 p.m., though acting Speaker PATRICK McHENRY could quickly put the chamber back into recess while Republicans figure out a way forward.

Related reads: “Internal conflicts and power struggles have become hallmarks of the modern GOP,” by AP’s Julie Carr Smyth and Nicholas Riccardi … “Think the House speaker vote is contentious? This one took two months,” by WaPo’s Ronald Shafer

Good Wednesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at birvine@politico.com.

 

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WHIPPING THE POST — The Washington Post’s initial plans to eliminate roughly 240 positions across the company rolled out today with a tranche of emails to Posties informing them whether or not they’re eligible for proposed buyouts — with the newsroom and opinion side accounting for “about half the burden,” NYT’s Ben Mullin reports.

Numbers down: WaPo’s Paul Farhi reports that since 2021, the Post’s audience is down 28%, subscriptions are down 15% and digital ads are down 30%.

Eyebrows up: At the town hall announcing the move, CEO PATTY STONESIFER addressed whether Amazon founder and Post owner JEFF BEZOS paid attention as the paper made unrealistic projections about its future, per Mullin: “Where was Jeff? Honestly, again, I don't know. … He trusts his leaders to lead — perhaps trusting longer than you would.”

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD 

THE LATEST ON THE GROUND — As the war between Israel and Hamas continues into its fifth day, Israeli Prime Minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU and opposition leader BENNY GANTZ agreed to form an emergency unity government.

The context: “The unusual arrangement cobbles together a degree of unity after years of bitterly divisive politics, as the military appears increasingly likely to launch a ground offensive into Gaza,” AP’s Joseph Krauss and Wafaa Shurafa Report from Jerusalem.

Netanyahu also spoke with President Biden today, with his office stating the prime minister "thanked the president for the powerful words of support he said after their last conversation yesterday and for his unreserved support for the State of Israel.”

Meanwhile, Axios’ Barak Ravid notes the immense response to President Biden’s address last night on the conflict, reporting “48% of Israeli households watched Biden's address on TV. This doesn't include streaming on the Internet or YouTube.”

Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN told reporters today in Morocco that “nothing is off the table” as the U.S. weighs whether to take up new sanctions against Iran and Hamas, NYT’s Alan Rappeport reports. Notably: “The Treasury secretary also did not rule out the possibility of reversing a decision made last month to unfreeze $6 billion of Iranian funds in exchange for the release of American hostages if it is determined that Iran was involved in the attack by Hamas.”

And on the Hill, House members were “clearly shaken” leaving a classified members-only briefing on Israel this morning, Punchbowl’s Heather Caygle reports, with House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair MICHAEL McCAUL (R-Texas) noting the first step forward is for the House to pass a bipartisan resolution supporting Israel, while “McCaul still seems in favor of tying Israel assistance to Ukraine aid.”

Other reactions: 

  • McCaul on what intelligence Israel had before the attack: “We know that Egypt had warned the Israelis 3 days prior that an event like this could happen. We know that this has been planned … as long as a [year] ago."
  • Rep. DERRICK VAN ORDEN (R-Wisc.) interrupted the briefing with a “curse-laden outburst” directed with the presenters from the White House, Nicholas Wu and Sarah Ferris report: “One person in the room said Van Orden shouted that the briefers’ presentation was ‘pathetic.’ Another attendee described it as ‘offensive and inappropriate.’”
  • Rep. Max Miller said he “learned something very, very new within that room that has changed the scope and how I see this developing situation.”
  • Rep. DON BACON (R-Neb.) said the Biden administration told lawmakers that they don’t yet have “clarity” on Iran’s role in the Hamas attacks on Israel, but added, “Anybody with any intelligence knows Iran is behind this.”

Related reads: Senators ask Defense Secretary Austin to give Israel two Iron Dome batteries,” by NBC News’ Sahil Kapur and Courtney Kube … Hamas uses social media to incite fear,” by Steven Overly

CONGRESS 

ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER MACE STORYLINE — The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday on Rep. NANCY MACE’s newly drawn South Carolina district, which has gotten more conservative since she was first in office. The 2022 redistricting meant her new constituents were “not surprised” when Mace voted to oust House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, NYT’s Jonathan Weisman reports from South Carolina.

“Ms. Mace still calls herself an iconoclast, but her transformation from denouncing the likes of Representative MATT GAETZ, Republican of Florida, to joining him in the first overthrow of a sitting speaker underscores a truism: Voters lead their politicians; politicians don’t lead their voters.”

SANTOS’ LITTLE HELPER — Embattled Rep. GEORGE SANTOS (R-N.Y.) is maintaining his innocence after being hit with an additional 10 federal charges yesterday ranging from wire fraud to identify theft — and says he’s not accepting a plea deal, Olivia Beavers reports. “Asked if he is blaming [his former treasurer NANCY] MARKS for the alleged crimes outlined in the latest indictment, Santos said no and invoked the so-called ‘Shaggy defense,’ a homage to the two-decade-old reggae-pop song: ‘I’m just saying it wasn’t me. I didn’t handle the finances. That is why you pay treasurers and fundraisers.’”

Santos all but dared his House colleagues to push him out of office: “They can try to expel me, but I pity the fools that go ahead and do that and think that that's the smartest idea. … They’re in tough elections next year, but they're setting precedent for the future.”

Meanwhile … Rep. ANTHONY D’ESPOSITO (R-N.Y.) posted on X today that he’ll be introducing an expulsion resolution to oust Santos, co-sponsored by fellow New York Reps. NICK LALOTA, MIKE LAWLER, MARC MOLINARO, NICK LANGWORTHY and BRANDON WILLIAMS. 

 

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2024 WATCH

IS THIS HALEY’S MOMENT?— As Hamas’ attack on Israel brings foreign policy conversations center stage for 2024 presidential candidates, AP’s Meg Kinnard reports on how that shift could benefit former UN Ambassador NIKKI HALEY on the campaign trail.

“Haley remains well behind former President Donald Trump after two energetic debate performances but is trying to position herself as his chief rival by drawing contrasts on how they view U.S. responsibility in foreign affairs. She’s tying the war between Israel and Hamas to her conservative domestic priorities, arguing that both Israel and the U.S. could be made vulnerable by what she calls ‘distractions.’”

SAME MITT, DIFFERENT DAY — “Sen. Mitt Romney urged Democratic senators to challenge Biden — and he named names,” by Deseret News’ Suzanne Bates

POLICY CORNER 

FEE FIGHT  — The FTC announced proposed rule this morning to to ban “junk fees” that cost consumers up to “an extra $80 billion every year,” NBC News’ Tom Costello and Phil Helsel report: “The proposed rule would make it clearer when extra fees are being charged, like at hotels and at live-ticket events, the agency says. It would bar businesses from using hidden fees … It would also prohibit businesses from advertising prices that leave out mandatory fees.”

AI ON THE BRAIN — The New AI Panic,” by the Atlantic’s Karen Hao: “Commerce is considering a new blockade on a broad category of general-purpose AI programs, not just physical parts … If enacted, the limits could generate more friction with China while weakening the foundations of AI innovation in the U.S.”

THE WHITE HOUSE 

IN THE DOGHOUSE — “At the White House, Commander is coming back to bite,” by Kelly Garitty: “Rep. VIRGINIA FOXX (R-N.C.), chair of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, sent a letter to Biden and acting Labor Secretary JULIE SU on Wednesday morning to request recent annual reports and ‘any employee workplace safety complaints filed with [the Occupational Safety and Health Administration] or any office or agency within the White House since January 20, 2021.’”

Foxx said she wrote the letter to remind the White House that it is “not immune to the laws of the land,” adding “If 10 people had accidents in a private plant, or if there had been dog bites in a private plant, I’ll guarantee you OSHA would have been down on the heads of the owners and operators of that plant.”

 

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PLAYBOOKERS

WEDDINGS — Jirair Ratevosian, a candidate for Congress in California’s 30th Congressional District to replace Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and a Barbara Lee and State Department alum, and Micheal Ighodaro, co-executive director for the Prevention Access Campaign, got married on Monday at St. Michael’s Church in New York, followed by a reception at Legacy Castle. The two worked together for the Biden-Harris campaign during the 2020 Iowa Caucus. SPOTTED: Jessica Stern and Loyce Pace. Pic 

— Brad Bosserman, head of corporate partnerships at The Messenger and a POLITICO alum, and Priscilla Magee, a development manager at Enel North America, got married Sept. 30 at the Perry Belmont House, with a 9:30 Club-themed after-party at The Line Hotel. PicAnother pic

— Colin Finnegan, a VP at Forbes Tate Partners, and Catharine Straley, a teacher at Westbrook Elementary School in Bethesda, Md., got married on Sunday at the Kent Island Resort in Stevensville, Md. The two met at Kenyon College eight years ago and have been living in D.C. ever since. Pic

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California Today: Gavin Newsom casts his final vote on high-profile bills

The California governor approved a measure making it easier to force people into mental health and addiction treatment, and rejected a ban on caste discrimination.
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By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Wednesday. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law measures including one that makes it easier to force people into mental health and addiction treatment, and vetoed others including a proposed ban on caste discrimination. Plus, a new Senate candidate enters the race.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, photographed during a television interview last month, had hundreds of bills on his desk and faced a Saturday deadline to sign or reject them.Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

It's been an especially busy few days for Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The governor is approaching a Saturday deadline to decide on hundreds of bills that the State Legislature sent to his desk last month for approval. The measures tackle a broad range of issues, including increasing mandatory paid sick leave, installing speeding cameras and banning certain additives in sweets.

Though many bills remain pending — of the more than 2,600 bills introduced this legislative session, the most in a decade, roughly 900 of them made it to Newsom's desk — the governor has already cast his final vote on some particularly high-profile and closely watched measures.

On Tuesday, the governor signed a bill to make it easier to detain people with mental health and addiction issues and force them into treatment. The new law, which critics say infringes on civil liberties, is part of a broader effort to overhaul the state's mental health system and address homelessness in California.

Newsom is expected to approve putting an initiative on the March primary election ballot to finance housing for homeless people with mental illness. More than 170,000 people are homeless in California, accounting for about one third of the nation's homeless population.

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"The mental health crisis affects us all, and people who need the most help have been too often overlooked," Newsom said in a statement on Tuesday. "We are working to ensure no one falls through the cracks, and that people get the help they need and the respect they deserve."

Over the holiday weekend, the governor signed a landmark bill requiring major companies to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions, a requirement that could have national and global repercussions in the fight against climate change.

He signed a bill making TikTok, Instagram and other social media sites liable if they fail to combat the spread of content that depicts child sexual abuse; another that allows California's legislative staff members to unionize; and one requiring that employers — and not workers — in the food service industry pay the cost of mandatory food safety training.

Newsom has also vetoed many measures this year: 143 over the weekend alone, according to CalMatters. Among his particularly consequential rejections:

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State Senator Steven Bradford, center, created the legislation to have an "Ebony Alert," intended to help find missing Black children.Jason Henry for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • California will be the first state to have an "Ebony Alert," intended specifically to help find missing Black children, NBC News reports.

Southern California

  • Steve Garvey, the former first baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres, announced that he would run as a Republican for the Senate seat left open by Dianne Feinstein's death.
  • Baseball, softball, flag football, lacrosse and cricket are among the sports being proposed for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

Northern California

  • After nearly three years, Vice President Kamala Harris is still struggling to make the case for herself — and feels she shouldn't have to.
  • San Francisco wants a case about removal of homeless encampments from city streets transferred to a judge who is overseeing an earlier local dispute over street tents and camps, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • A court ruling allowing noncitizen parents in San Francisco to vote in local school board elections became final when the leader of a conservative nonprofit said he wouldn't appeal it, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.

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Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Kathleen Kilpatrick, who recommends a road trip through Owens Valley in eastern California:

"My son and I just took a trip to Owens Valley, east of the Sierra. Once we got out of Bakersfield into the Kern River Canyon, the scenery was fantastic almost everywhere we went. A few roads were closed because of the unusual storm that passed through at the end of August, which a young man in a visitor center referred to as 'our hurricane.' Rabbit brush and wildflowers were blooming, and the high desert was unseasonably green.

We traveled Movie Road up to the closed sign, had a very moving visit to Manzanar, ate lunch by a rushing creek. The museum in Independence had been recommended. We found more local history there, and the biggest collection of Native American baskets I'd ever seen. The next day, we wound up to the bristlecone pines, at over 9,000 feet. Did you know they have purple pine cones? There were sweeping views of mountains everywhere we went. After two nights in Bishop, we went home through Yosemite, more spectacular scenery, although more crowded than anywhere else we had been."

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

We're looking to feature more of your favorite places to visit in California. Send us suggestions for day trips, scenic outlooks, hikes and more. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com.

The campus at the University of California, Irvine, which was part of an inaugural program for incarcerated people to pursue bachelor's degrees in prison.Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times, via, Getty Images

And before you go, some good news

Patrick Acuña spent most of the last 30 years in California's state prisons serving a life sentence he received at age 19. Now, a year after his release, Acuña is beginning his final year at the University of California, Irvine, where he will graduate with a degree in social ecology.

Acuña began taking community college courses decades ago while still in prison and earned two associate degrees. But the glimmer of higher education remained elusive for him until 2022, when the University of California system inaugurated a program for incarcerated people to pursue bachelor's degrees in prison. Acuña became one of just 26 people at his San Diego facility to be admitted to U.C. Irvine.

In 2018, his case was retried and his sentence commuted, leading to his release last October and an eventual move to Irvine's campus, a first for his program. The change was often difficult but worthwhile, he said, crediting his rehabilitation to education.

"We engage in education because once we get a taste of it, we understand that it transforms our lives in ways we don't even initially understand," Acuña told EdSource in an interview. "It broadens our perspective."

Yesterday's newsletter misstated Representative Nancy Pelosi's connection to an all-girls high school in San Francisco, the Convent of the Sacred Heart. Her daughters attended the school, but Ms. Pelosi did not. (She went to high school in Baltimore.)

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

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

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