Spending and censures divide the Hill

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Nov 07, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Eli Okun

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SCOTUS WATCH — At today’s blockbuster oral arguments on whether domestic abusers can be barred from having firearms, the Supreme Court appeared inclined to impose some rare limits on gun rights. Several justices indicated they thought such laws would comply with the new standard the court created last year that gun restrictions must be rooted in American historical tradition. This case is the high court’s first major guns test since then. More from NBC

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol Oct. 31, 2023. (Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Images)

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer excoriated Senate Republicans’ demands for massive changes to the U.S. asylum system to accompany Ukraine aid. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

THE SPENDING SHOWDOWNS — If Congress is going to reach deals to send emergency aid to Ukraine and Israel, or keep the government open past a shutdown deadline next week, the agreements are certainly not in sight yet.

Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER excoriated Senate Republicans’ demands for massive changes to the U.S. asylum system to accompany the funding in the Biden administration’s supplemental request (which also includes money for Palestinians, the Indo-Pacific and the border). “They know full well what they came up with is a total non-starter,” Schumer warned on the floor, though he said he was open to immigration reforms. “Making Ukraine funding conditional on the hard-right border policies that can’t ever pass Congress is a huge mistake.” Schumer also said on a leadership call today that Dems should “more urgently engage with Republicans on Ukraine,” Burgess Everett reports.

On the Senate floor, Democrats quickly swatted down Sen. J.D. VANCE’s (R-Ohio) attempt to pass the House GOP’s Israel aid/IRS cuts bill by unanimous consent. But it’s not just the hard-right flank of the Senate GOP that is holding firm against Schumer: “At least 41 Republican Senators will refuse to proceed unless and until substantive policy changes are included that will stop the #BidenBorderCrisis,” Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas) pledged on X.

Meanwhile, House Republicans emerged from a conference meeting without a clear consensus for which continuing resolution strategy to pursue to avoid a government shutdown, per Caitlin Emma. Speaker MIKE JOHNSON said he would unveil an interim spending bill in “short order” and “certainly” wants to stave off a shutdown.

The upshot: “At the moment tens of billions for Ukraine, Israel, the border and Taiwan are all at risk of being left on the sidelines, and there’s no clear funding plan for avoiding a shutdown, either,” Burgess writes.

COME TO YOUR CENSURES — Accusations keep flying in the House, where Republicans are teeing up two more censure resolutions against Rep. RASHIDA TLAIB (D-Mich.) and Democrats are preparing one of their own against Rep. BRIAN MAST (R-Fla.).

Tlaib blasted her critics in a fiery statement this morning, after her defense of the chant “From the river to the sea” drew fresh opprobrium. “It’s a shame my colleagues are more focused on silencing me than they are on saving lives, as the death toll in Gaza surpasses 10,000,” she wrote. “Many of them have shown me that Palestinian lives simply do not matter to them, but I still do not police their rhetoric or actions.”

But Republican outrage is growing. Several GOP members who voted against the Tlaib censure resolution last week, mostly on free speech grounds, are indicating more openness this time around. Prominent Democrats are continuing to oppose the censure even as many of them condemn Tlaib’s comments. But two pro-Israel Dems are signaling support for the Tlaib censure: Reps. JOSH GOTTHEIMER (D-N.J.) and RITCHIE TORRES (D-N.Y.), per CNN. House Dem leaders are not pushing members either way on the vote to punish Mast after he compared Palestinian civilians to Nazis, Fox News’ Chad Pergram reports.

SCARY STUFF — Capitol Police arrested a man after they got a call for somebody with an AR-15, per NBC’s Frank Thorp. Authorities said he was taken into custody in the park across from Union Station and there’s no threat currently.

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

 

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FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: CIRCUS LEAVES TOWN — “The Circus,” the Showtime show hosted by JOHN HEILEMANN, MARK McKINNON and JENNIFER PALMIERI, will end its run on Sunday with a series finale, Daniel Lippman reports. The show, on which a rotating cast of hosts hit the campaign trail, explored Washington intrigue and interviewed major political candidates, received four Emmy nominations during its run.

“When we started ‘The Circus’ in 2016, we thought it would be a one-and-done deal. Eight seasons and 130 episodes later, we’re still agog that Showtime gave us the trust and support that kept us cranking on this long, strange trip — and let us prove that our idea of doing a weekly, behind-the-scenes, real-time doc series on American politics wasn’t as unhinged as it seemed,” Heilemann tells Playbook in a statement. “Our belief in the importance of the story we've been covering and our eagerness to keep covering it, Circus-style, hasn’t changed."

CONGRESS

LEAVING A LEGACY — Sens. TODD YOUNG (R-Ind.) and TIM KAINE (D-Va.) today are introducing legislation that aims to bar colleges and universities from giving preference to legacy students in admissions, WSJ’s Lindsay Wise and Jennifer Calfas scooped. It’s one of the most muscular legislative responses thus far to the Supreme Court’s decision to end race-based affirmative action, though it remains to be seen whether the bill will advance on the Hill.

THE IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY — As special counsel DAVID WEISS testified before House GOP impeachment investigators today, WSJ’s Aruna Viswanatha, Ryan Barber and Sadie Gurman dig into thousands of pages of records to evaluate the state of the case. They find “that multiple officials disputed several of the IRS agents’ most explosive [whistleblowing] allegations, while corroborating others, including widespread frustrations in the inquiry.” The HUNTER BIDEN probe “was ultimately hamstrung by suspicion among members of the team.”

Weiss told Republicans that nobody prevented him from taking any actions he wanted to in the Hunter Biden prosecution, per NYT’s Glenn Thrush.

COACH VS. THE SENATE — The Senate Rules Committee scheduled a hearing for Nov. 14 on the resolution from Sens. JACK REED (D-R.I.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (I-Ariz.) that would circumvent Sen. TOMMY TUBERVILLE’s (R-Ala.) mass holds on Pentagon nominees.

 

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2024 WATCH

MESSAGING FAILURE — New Democratic polling from Blueprint/YouGov finds that President JOE BIDEN’s attempt to tout strong jobs numbers is falling completely flat with voters, who care way more about inflation, Semafor’s David Weigel reports. And his attempts to move to the center haven’t worked either: Just as many voters think he’s too far left as think DONALD TRUMP is too far right. Interesting response thread from BHARAT RAMAMURTI

SPOILER ALERT — CORNEL WEST and his “radical pessimism” get a big profile by N.Y. Mag’s Zak Cheney-Rice, who peels back the curtain on the insurgent challenger: “West eats one meal a day, claims to sleep three hours a night, wears the same funereal three-piece suit all the time, and says he hasn’t had a haircut since the mid-1990s. But it’s an unsustainable pace, as even he acknowledges, especially for an election that he has almost no chance of winning and that he might end up throwing to Donald Trump. At risk, too, is his legacy as a champion of the forgotten and the oppressed, though the way he sees it, the greater danger is that no one would take on that role at all.”

— In those eye-popping NYT/Siena College polls that have cast a pall over Biden the past couple of days, there’s also high interest in ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR. Almost one-fourth of voters choose the anti-vaccine activist over Biden or Trump. But he’s little known, and the results “suggest that Mr. Kennedy is less a fixed political figure in the minds of voters than he is a vessel to register unhappiness about the choice” between the top two, NYT’s Reid Epstein, Ruth Igielnik and Camille Baker write.

AFTERNOON READ — “Joe Lieberman will not leave his fellow Democrats alone,” by WaPo’s Kara Voght: “With No Labels, the Democratic maverick is still trying to foil liberals and challenge the party — even if that means threatening to throw a wrench into the 2024 campaign.”

COMING HOME — Miami-Dade Republicans are fans of RON DeSANTIS as their governor, but many of them want him to return to Tallahassee and focus on the state instead of challenging Trump for the GOP presidential nomination, WaPo’s Sabrina Rodríguez reports from Hialeah. They’re “frustrated to see him out on the campaign trail in places like Iowa and New Hampshire, where he has struggled to gain traction, instead of focusing on the issues facing Floridians.”

 

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AMERICA AND THE WORLD

FROM RUSSIA, WITH LOVE — Moscow today officially withdrew from the 1990 Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, the latest sign of breakdown between Russia and the West. As a result, the U.S. and other NATO allies suspended the treaty. More from Reuters

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — “Biden Briefed on Chinese Effort to Put Military Base in Oman,” by Bloomberg’s Michelle Jamrisko and Jennifer Jacobs

ANNALS OF HYPOCRISY — Worldwide efforts to get Israel to protect more Palestinian lives are spurring a quick response: What about you? Israeli officials are pointing to plenty of U.S. and other Western operations through the decades, from Hiroshima to Fallujah, “to help justify a campaign against Hamas” and their willingness to accept thousands of civilian deaths, NYT’s Michael Crowley and Edward Wong report. Human rights experts say Israel is committing war crimes, though the U.S. hasn’t gone there.

KNOWING RON DERMER — The right-wing Israeli leader and former ambassador to the U.S., now sitting on Israel’s war cabinet, is the country’s “chief conduit to the Biden administration,” NYT’s Mark Landler reports from Jerusalem. As Israel wages war on Gaza, Democratic officials are now working very closely with Dermer to support Jerusalem — despite his antagonistic history with the Obama administration. Thus far, at least, U.S. officials say he’s “been a constructive presence in multiple meetings and phone calls — the ups and downs of their long relationship serving as a source of familiarity rather than rancor.”

KNOWING JOHN KIRBY — “The retired Navy admiral making the case for Israel in the White House briefing room,” by Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch: “As calls for a cease-fire have grown more pronounced among the hard left, John Kirby has become one of the loudest voices espousing the president’s commitment to Israel’s security.”

POLICY CORNER

WHERE THE IRA IS WORKING, PART I — The U.S. is finally succeeding in getting solar companies to invest in manufacturing stateside, NYT’s Ana Swanson and Jim Tankersley report. The Inflation Reduction Act’s significant tax breaks, along with several years of tariffs and other protectionist moves, are “driving a wave of so-called reshoring of solar jobs,” like a reopened Suniva plant in Georgia. Solar executives say explicitly that the IRA lured them back.

WHERE THE IRA IS WORKING, PART II — Flush with new investments from the law, the IRS has reached a milestone of making many tax documents and other forms digital months ahead of schedule, Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN is announcing today, per AP’s Fatima Hussein. Taxpayers can start submitting documents online now, rather than next year.

 

GET READY FOR POLITICO’S DEFENSE SUMMIT ON 11/14: Russia’s war on Ukraine … China’s threats to Taiwan … a war in Gaza. The U.S. is under increasing pressure to deter, defend and fight in more ways — but not everyone agrees how. Join POLITICO's 3rd Annual Defense Summit on November 14 for exclusive interviews and expert discussions on global security and the U.S.'s race to bolster alliances and stay ahead of adversaries. Explore critical topics, including international conflicts, advanced technology, spending priorities and political dynamics shaping global defense strategies. Don’t miss these timely and important discussions. REGISTER HERE.

 
 

MORE POLITICS

HAPPY ELECTION DAY — One notable under-the-radar election happening today: YUSEF SALAAM, one of the exonerated “Central Park Five,” is positioned to ascend to the New York City Council, AP’s Anthony Izaguirre reports.

LET THE SUNSHINE IN — Florida is in the spotlight with a five-story package by Teen Vogue, titled “Red Tide,” interviewing “nearly two dozen young people to hear their stories about life under Governor Ron DeSantis.”

2028 WATCH — Sen. TED CRUZ (R-Texas) tells The Texas Tribune’s Grace Yarrow he expects to run for president again someday.

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE — An internal GOP poll finds Sinema way behind Republican KARI LAKE and Democratic Rep. RUBEN GALLEGO if she runs for reelection, The Messenger’s Matt Holt scooped. But her presence in the race would flip it from a narrow Gallego lead to a narrow Lake lead.

PLAYBOOKERS

TRANSITION — Don Schaefer is joining Frontwood Strategies as a VP focusing on paid and owned digital campaigns. He previously was a director at Curley Company.

WEEKEND WEDDING — Selby Schnobrich, senior account manager at POLITICO, and David Tennent, founder of CNCT, got married Saturday at Heigh Torr Estate in Purcellville, Va. They met in August 2021 and had their first date at Mission Navy Yard. Pic, courtesy of Emily Nicole PhotographyAnother pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Sam Leach, senior director of sampling at Cygnal, and Haley Leach, a former teacher and full-time mom, welcomed Eden Renee Leach on Sunday. Pic

— Charles Russell, account strategist at Cygnal, and Suzie Russell, territory VP for the Atlantic at WeWork, welcomed Charles Wm. “Ford” Russell IV on Sunday. Pic

— Rac Roland, director of reporting and analytics at Cygnal, and Ronald Roland, data analyst at Cygnal, welcomed Emery Roche Roland on Monday. Pic

BIRTHWEEK (was Sunday): Owen Beal from Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) office … (was yesterday): Crystal Sung from Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) office

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Exploring Rental Property Investing as a Strategic Exit Strategy with Rental Property Pro Owner, John Blackburn starts in an hour

California Today: College campuses convulsed in protest over Israel-Hamas war

Two U.C. Berkeley professors who disagree on Israel and Palestine came together to encourage peace on campus.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Wednesday. Israel-Hamas war heightens tensions on college campuses. Plus, the authorities opened a hate crime investigation into a hit-and-run at Stanford.

Sharon Knafel chanting alongside her friends during a rally held in support of Israel at the University of California, Berkeley.Jessica Christian/San Francisco Chronicle, via Associated Press

Tensions have been especially high on university campuses since the war between Israel and Hamas began a month ago.

The police were called to a U.C. Davis student Senate meeting after students supporting Israel and Palestine began shouting at one another. Stanford Law School moved classes online for a day because of students' concerns about their safety. On Friday, an Arab Muslim student at Stanford University was hurt in a hit-and-run crash that's being investigated as a hate crime.

Some have compared the scale of campus protests to demonstrations against the Vietnam War in the 1960s, but there's a key difference. This time, there are deeper divisions among students, as the conflict has widened a yawning gulf between those supporting Israel and Palestine.

Many students disagree about how to even talk about the violence, and feelings are heightened by grief as deaths continue to mount in the Middle East. Hamas's surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7 killed 1,400 people, and the Israeli government has since unleashed a devastating barrage of airstrikes against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, where health officials say more than 10,000 people are now dead. You can follow the latest Times coverage of the war here.

At U.C. Berkeley, a campus famous for its political activism, students on both sides have reported that they've been threatened and doxxed. Many wear masks to protests for fear of being identified and harassed on social media.

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The debate has been polarizing. A Berkeley law professor wrote an opinion essay in The Wall Street Journal calling for firms not to hire his "antisemitic law students." A group of 300 U.C. faculty members, including many at U.C. Berkeley, wrote a letter condemning the university system's use of the word "terrorism" to describe Hamas's attacks on Israel.

After a conflict on U.C. Berkeley's Sproul Plaza between Jewish students and students opposed to Israel's actions, in which a campus rabbi even took a few blows, Ron Hassner, a professor of Israel studies, had an idea to try to encourage peace at the university. He emailed Hatem Bazian, a lecturer in Middle Eastern languages and cultures and Asian American and Asian diaspora studies, to ask if he would want to co-write a statement calling for students to treat one another with dignity and respect.

The two men teach in the same building and are cordial to each other, but they disagree vehemently on Israel and Palestine. They share no common ground — and that was exactly the point of coming together to collaborate, they told me.

U.C. Berkeley's chancellor, Carol Christ, emailed their joint statement to the student body. It reads, in part: "We will not tolerate our students harming one another. Disagreement and differing points of view are an essential part of campus life, and we expect that you treat one another with the same respect and dignity that we are modeling here."

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The statement is spare, in part because there is so little the men agree on, including the language to characterize the violence in the Middle East. When I contacted them about a joint phone interview last week, they each said they preferred to speak separately with me.

"The wounds are open, and we are grieving," Hassner told me by email. "The significance of the letter, in my mind, is not that we are friendly colleagues who joined forces for peace but rather that we are not. Writing that letter together was very hard for both of us."

Bazian told me that their statement wasn't meant to change people's minds about the conflict, but to dissuade students from resorting to violence. "With the type of intensity of what is taking place in Gaza, I think the temperature of the campus is at a high critical level," he said. "We want to make sure that everyone has the space to express themselves without actually crossing any boundaries that they would regret."

Hassner said he was clinging to the statement as a sliver of optimism in a dark time. He said he had been moved to tears when Bazian agreed to write it with him.

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He told me: "It seemed to me like a moment of hope for academia — that there's something that can be saved if two professors who disagree about everything can agree that academia is sacred. Then at least we're standing on a solid foundation. And that gives me a lot of hope."

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Payton Cortez, 3, hugging Mickey Mouse at Disneyland in Anaheim last year.Alex Welsh for The New York Times

The rest of the news

Southern California

  • San Diego County officials are searching for organizations willing to erect tiny homes for homeless people as elected leaders weigh cracking down on encampments, The San Diego Union-Tribune reports.
  • A 15-year-old boy was arrested in connection with a shooting that injured four people inside a restaurant south of San Diego last month, The Associated Press reports.

Central California

  • Two former members of the Bitwise Industries board of directors are accusing the failed technology company's former chief executives of providing "false and fraudulent financial information" to them, The Fresno Bee reports.

Northern California

  • The police have arrested a 23-year-old man suspected in the killing of his grandmother, who was found decapitated at a home in Santa Rosa, The Associated Press reports.
Folsom Powerhouse State Historic ParkBrian Baer/California State Parks

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Mary Ann Mitchell, who lives in Folsom. Mary Ann recommends her own town, 30 minutes northeast of Sacramento:

"There are so many things to love! We are surrounded by oak trees and water. The historic downtown is full of delicious and unique restaurants and wine tasting spots, along with shops and my favorite independent bookstore, Ruby's Books. There are fun experiences everywhere. Folsom is also full of California gold rush history, and there are so many state parks nearby. The Folsom Powerhouse State Historic Park, Folsom Lake, Lake Natoma and Black Minors Bar are just next door. Having access to the water where folks swim, kayak, paddle board and boat is the best. There is so much to explore, yet my most favorite thing about my town is our bike trails. My husband and I try to ride often. We have miles and miles of trails that wind through the oak trees, pass by wooded creeks and streams, wander by wet lands full of birds, glide along old railroad tracks and run next to the American River, and you can usually find a coffee shop nearby for a break. It's a wonderful way to escape a busy life. I love where I live and am so fortunate to have landed here in Folsom."

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

I'm thinking about how Californians celebrate Thanksgiving. By the beach? With sourdough stuffing?

Email your Golden State Thanksgiving traditions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. Please include your full name and the city in which you live.

Camille Dillard

And before you go, some good news

When Claire Marie-Elisabeth Rabut met Aaron Gabriel Nastaskin, an exchange student at her high school in Chartres, France, he didn't quite match the picture in her mind of a typical Californian. But he, a Los Angeles native studying in France, was smitten with her.

In the years that followed, the two lost touch, pursuing college degrees in their respective countries, though remaining friends on Facebook. But their paths crossed again in Paris almost eight years later, where, as fate would have it, Rabut was studying and Nastaskin was interviewing for a job. On a whim, Nastaskin suggested they meet to catch up, and there, on a snowy day in Paris over lunch at a Vietnamese restaurant, the two hit it off, flakes falling softly on the street behind them.

A few late nights and a weekend getaway later, it was love. Nastaskin moved back to Los Angeles a little while later to start a food marketing company, and Rabut joined him soon after finishing her Ph.D., taking a job as a postdoctoral research scholar in biomedical engineering at Caltech.

When the couple became engaged in April 2022, they commenced a season of wedding festivities that honored their shared multicultural backgrounds (Rabut is French and Vietnamese, and Nastaskin has family from Kyiv), as well as their international love affair — from Chartres City Hall all the way to their temple in Redondo Beach.

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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