Morning Report

The Hill’s Morning Report – Dems jolted by senator’s stroke, majority status

Light shines from the U.S. Capitol dome after sunset
Associated Press/Patrick Semansky

 

Light shines from the U.S. Capitol dome after sunset

 

 

Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! We get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the co-creators. Readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 884,260; Tuesday, 886,687; Wednesday, 890,770. 

 

The U.S. death rate per capita from the coronavirus exceeds that of other wealthy nations, and the reasons are well known (The New York Times).

Democrats on Capitol Hill are faced with a potpourri of issues this week as they deal with a near-term blow to their slim majority, the looming confirmation process of President Biden’s nominee for the Supreme Court and the dormant status of Build Back Better talks. 

 

Through his office, Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) on Tuesday disclosed that he suffered a stroke on Thursday last week and underwent “decompressive surgery to ease swelling” in his brain. According to Carlos Sanchez, Luján’s chief of staff, the New Mexico Democrat remains hospitalized. 

 

In addition to concerns among his colleagues about Luján’s health, his absence presents potential near-term trouble for Senate Democrats. They are down a vote in the evenly divided chamber for the immediate future. While Luján’s representatives say the senator is expected to make a “full recovery,” it is unknown when he might return to Washington, leaving Democrats unable to advance nominees or legislation that could require Vice President Harris to cast a tie-breaking vote. Unlike in the House, senators must vote in person.

 

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) offered assurances. 

 

“First, we are all praying for Ben and his family. We are all grateful that he will have a full recovery. We look forward to his quick return to the Senate, and I believe the Senate will be able to carry forward with its business,” Schumer said (Fox News).

 

For the next week at least, Senate Democrats will be able to function as usual; Republican Sens. Mitt Romney (Utah) and John Hoeven (N.D.) are absent due to COVID-19 infections (The Hill). However, that will not last forever. 

 

Schumer had lined up roughly 20 nominees for consideration in the coming weeks, and the shockwaves of Luján’s absence were felt right away. As The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports, Democrats on the Commerce Committee — of which Luján is a member — almost immediately yanked three nominations that were expected to get votes on Wednesday. An aide noted that the agenda was being “recalibrated to take into consideration the need for all Democratic votes in order to move certain nominees forward.”

 

“It’s just a reminder that in a 50-50 Senate any unexpected development could be a challenge to our moving forward on an agenda that the Democratic caucus shares,” Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) said while emphasizing that he expects Luján, 49, to recover.

 

Reminder: Two senators in recent years — Former Sens. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) and Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) — have had to take extended absences from the Senate after suffering a stroke. It took Johnson nine months to return to work after his Dec. 2006 stroke. As for Kirk, he needed a full year to recover before returning to Washington in Jan. 2013.

 

This also isn’t the first health scare for Senate Democrats since retaking the majority. A year ago, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) was briefly evaluated at a hospital as a precaution at age 80 while complaining of feeling ill. He went home to convalesce and soon returned to work (The New York Times).

 

Politico: Luján stroke sends Senate Democrats reeling.

 

 

Sen. Sen. Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M., speaks during a hearing

 

 

Senators later this month expect Biden to announce his nominee to replace Justice Stephen Breyer on the Supreme Court. On Tuesday in a show of seeking bipartisan input, Biden met with Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the two top senators on the Judiciary Committee, to discuss his upcoming selection process. 

 

“The Constitution says ‘advise and consent, advice and consent,’ and I’m serious when I say I want the advice of the Senate as well as the consent,” Biden told reporters.

 

Biden also discussed the pending nomination with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday. A McConnell spokesman told The Hill that during the phone call, ​​McConnell “emphasized the importance of a nominee who believes in judicial independence and will resist all efforts by politicians to bully the Court or to change the structure of the judicial system.”

 

The Hill: McConnell looks to turn down the temperature on Supreme Court fight.

 

The New York Times: White House chooses former Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) to guide the eventual Supreme Court nominee.

 

Hanna Trudo, The Hill: Biden Supreme Court pick seems likely to make progressives happy.

 

 

President Joe Biden speaks in the Oval Office

 

 

Meanwhile, what’s the status of Biden’s Build Back Better package, which the president has said could be sliced into “chunks” to try to get a compromise version through the Senate? Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), whose objections helped scuttle a nearly $2 trillion measure last year, used the word “dead” to describe its prospects. 

 

“What Build Back Better bill? There is no — I mean I don’t know what you’re all talking about,” Manchin told reporters. When asked if he’s conferred recently with Democratic leaders about next steps, he responded in the negative, adding, “It’s dead” (Politico). 

 

The Hill: Lawmakers face time crunch to clinch funding deal.

 

Morgan Chalfant, The Hill: White House sees China bill as fix for some of its problems.

 

> Jan. 6 latest: McConnell on Tuesday also broke from former President Trump’s call to give pardons to those convicted in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, saying that he does not back that possibility. 

 

“I would not be in favor of shortening any of the sentences for any of the people who pleaded guilty to crimes,” McConnell told reporters, noting that 165 people linked to the violent storming of the Capitol more than one year ago “have pleaded guilty to crimes.”

 

The Hill: GOP can’t escape Trump-fueled election controversies.

 

Shane Goldmacher, The New York Times: Trump’s words, and deeds, reveal depths of his drive to retain power.

 

CNN: Another top aide to former Vice President Mike Pence is meeting with the House Jan. 6 committee. 

LEADING THE DAY

ADMINISTRATION: Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke Tuesday about Ukraine for the first time publicly since December, complaining that Russia’s concerns fall on deaf ears in NATO but indicating Moscow wants to keep talking even as he insists it is the United States that stokes conflict.

 

“It is already clear that Russia’s fundamental concerns have been ignored,” Putin said at a press conference. “NATO refers to the right of countries to choose freely, but you cannot strengthen someone’s security at the expense of others,” he added after meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. “We haven’t seen adequate consideration of our three key requirements concerning the prevention of NATO expansion, the refusal to deploy strike weapons systems near the Russian borders as well as the return of the military infrastructure” to NATO’s 1997 borders, he continued (The New York Times and Axios).

 

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures while speaking

 

 

The Associated Press: Putin wants to keep talking with the West.

 

The Biden administration, which condemned Russia on Monday at the United Nations, was quick to respond again on Tuesday, eager to push back against Putin’s narrative while keeping diplomatic channels open. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke again with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, each restating by phone familiar positions. Blinken, according to a statement, told his counterpart that immediate de-escalation and withdrawal of troops and equipment from Ukraine’s border is the bottom line recommendation, accompanied by the U.S.-NATO offer to continue security discussions with Moscow (The Hill).

 

Russia, not the West, is the aggressor, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said during her daily briefing. “When the fox is screaming from the top of the henhouse that he’s scared of the chickens, which is essentially what they’re doing, that fear isn’t reported as a statement of fact,” she said. “As you watch President Putin screaming about the fear of Ukraine and the Ukrainians, that should not be reported as a statement of fact” (The Guardian).

 

The Hill: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has publicly downplayed fears of imminent war with Russia but not his country’s wariness about Russia’s harsh view of Ukraine as a democracy. As talks continue with the Kremlin, the international forecasts of war this month appear to have hit a slow-motion pause. Putin will be in Beijing this week and will meet with President Xi Jinping during the Olympics.   

 

On Capitol Hill, senators drafting a tough Russia sanctions bill encountered more debate Tuesday about whether punishments should be pre- or post-attack and when and if sanctions should hit the Nord Stream 2 pipeline important to Russia but also important in Europe (The Hill).

 

The Hill: The State Department ordered U.S. Embassy employees’ families to leave Belarus, where Russian troops are positioned with eyes trained on Ukraine.

 

> Today during a White House event, the president will announce his goal to reduce the U.S. death rate from cancer by 50 percent. In 2019, 600,000 people died from cancer in the United States and the administration’s goal is to improve the rate of screenings, diagnoses and available treatments. Brain cancer killed Biden’s son, Beau, in 2015 and former President Obama had initiated a federal focus on finding faster cures for cancer. That “moonshot” endeavor is officially being rekindled at the White House today, again under Biden’s stewardship, but it’s unclear if additional federal spending will follow (The Associated Press). 

 

> Chinese spying in the U.S. has become so widespread that the FBI is launching an average of two counterintelligence investigations a day to counter the onslaught, FBI Director Christopher Wray said during an interview with NBC News’s Pete Williams. The scale of China’s efforts to steal U.S. technology has meant that more than 2,000 such cases are currently under FBI investigation. “This one blew me away. And I’m not the kind of guy that uses words like ‘blown away’ easily,” Wray said.

 

> The Interior Department is under new pressure after being ordered Thursday by a federal judge to conduct a fresh environmental analysis that reflects greenhouse gas emissions that would result from the eventual development and production of offshore drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico. The decision to cancel oil and gas leases of more than 80 million acres was a victory for environmental groups, which argued the Biden administration did not sufficiently take climate change into account when it auctioned the leases late last year (The Hill and The New York Times).  

 

*****

 

CORONAVIRUS: What does it look like on the other side of the winter surge? It’s a question asked by governors, local officials and school administrators, physicians and nurses, business leaders and economists. The number of confirmed COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations and the clearly downward slopes seen in charts and computer models stir hope. Life in a thicket of risk precautions may be changing. Fingers crossed.

 

America’s 19 million children under age 5 may be eligible for COVID-19 vaccine doses as early as March, a development many parents have said they welcome. In an extraordinary move, the Food and Drug Administration had urged Pfizer and its partner BioNTech to apply for federal approval earlier than the companies had planned — and before research determined conclusively whether two shots or three are most effective. Children as young as 6 months would receive jabs that contain one-tenth of the vaccine dose given to adults, Pfizer said (The Associated Press).

 

More data-driven good news: COVID-19 hospitalizations have declined in 34 states and in Washington, D.C. (Bloomberg News). Here’s more: The World Health Organization affirmed there is no indication that severe illness results from omicron’s cunningly infectious cousin known as BA.2 (The Washington Post). 

 

Not far from Washington, D.C., to cite examples, counties are doing away with indoor mask mandates, which omicron’s rampage had revived: Howard County, Md., made the decision to jettison mask requirements for most public settings because its COVID-19 numbers improved since December (WTOP). Baltimore County’s indoor face mask order expired on Tuesday, with the exception of public schools. The county’s COVID-19 state of emergency, which was tied to the mask order, will expire as scheduled on Monday (WBALTV).

 

COVID-19 vaccine mandates at two Virginia universities are gone, in part because vaccination rates are so high among students and staff and infection rates dropped (WTOP).

 

Dispensing with masks indoors, however, does not mean omicron is somehow less likely to strike. Ask House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), 82, who announced on Tuesday that he tested positive for the coronavirus after being fully vaccinated and boosted and developing mild symptoms. He said he plans to vote by proxy on any House matters while in isolation (The Hill).

 

 

Fans wearing face masks walk past a sign recommending masks before an NBA basketball game

 

 

In the U.S., there still are worrisome economic signals: 4.3 million Americans quit jobs in December as omicron surged, leaving an estimated 10.9 million vacancies. The employment report for January, to be released Friday, could be bleak, according to some analysts.

 

Omicron infections continue to hit the FedEx workforce hard enough to force the company to announce a pause in its domestic express freight services because of staff shortages (The Hill).

 

And if you’re a competitor in the Beijing Winter Olympics, the COVID-19 positivity rate for athletes and officials was a disappointing 40 percent higher than that of others arriving for the events over a three-day period from Saturday through Monday. At arrival gates in China, disinfectant crews are busy spraying chemicals (pictured below). Positive COVID-19 tests mean athletes risk missing their events because they are sent to isolation hotels in order to limit the spread of the virus (The Associated Press).

 

 

A worker wearing a protective suit sprays disinfectant at a screening checkpoint for arriving athletes at the 2022 Winter Olympics

 

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

POLITICS: Campaign finance reports are in. Republicans’ optimism about retaking Congress shows up in campaigns’ coffers. 

 

As The Hill’s Reid Wilson and Max Greenwood detail, GOP groups — including many that trailed their Democratic counterparts two years ago — are pulling ahead in the dash for cash as the party pushes for a November rebuke of Biden’s presidency. 

 

Senate Leadership Fund, the main super PAC backing GOP Senate candidates, closed 2021 with $47.4 million in the bank, topping Democrats’ Senate Majority PAC by nearly $17 million in cash on hand. That success was also seen at the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which now leads the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee with $32.8 million in the bank to $23.7 million. 

 

Across the Capitol complex, the House Democratic campaign arm maintains a slight advantage over the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), reporting $82.5 million on hand compared to $78.2 million for the NRCC. However, the NRCC outraised Democrats by more than $2 million in December.

 

The Hill: Former President George W. Bush donated to the campaigns of Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), respectively. 

 

> Comeback season: Progressive candidates who lost recent bids for Congress are making comebacks across the country as the left wing of the party hopes for a reversal of fortune after a rough-and-tumble 2021.

 

As The Hill’s Hanna Trudo and Julia Manchester point out, former Ohio state Sen. Nina Turner (D) launched a second primary challenge against Rep. Shontel Brown (D-Ohio.) after dropping the first contest in a special primary election last year. In Texas, Jessica Cisneros is running against Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) after losing to the moderate lawmaker in the 2020 primary by just under 4 points.

 

The bids come on the heels of a number of losses on the legislative side to moderates, leaving progressives to strike back at the ballot box.

 

> Military push: Frontline Patriots PAC, a GOP group tasked with promoting veterans and military candidates, announced its first batch of endorsements ahead of the 2022 election this morning. Among those earning the committee’s backing are Wesley Hunt (Texas-38), Morgan Luttrell (Texas-08), Esther Joy King (Ill.-17) and former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke (Montana-01). 

 

“As I’ve said time and time again, veterans bring a unique perspective to Congress. It’s about mission, it’s about country, it’s about getting things done. And we have a lot of things we need to get done for the American people,” Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.), a U.S. Army officer who’s helping to spearhead the group, said in a statement. 

The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@digital-release.thehill.com and aweaver@digital-release.thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE! 

OPINION

A listening deficit plagues America, from 2020 vote to Jan. 6 to vaccines, by Gerald F. Seib, executive Washington editor, The Wall Street Journal. https://on.wsj.com/3s5iL8s 

 

Yes, more variants may emerge in the future. That’s why we should lift restrictions now, by Leana S. Wen, contributing columnist, https://wapo.st/3GnCncO 

WHERE AND WHEN

The House meets at 10 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and will resume consideration of the nomination of Rupa Puttagunta to become a judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.

 

The president and the vice president will receive the President’s Daily Brief at 10:15 a.m. Biden, Harris and first lady Jill Biden host an event at 1:30 p.m. to revive the White House Cancer Moonshot, first unveiled in 2016 during the Obama-Biden administration.

 

The White House press briefing is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. The administration’s COVID-19 response team will brief journalists at 3 p.m.

 

Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://digital-release.thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE

CYBER SPYING & WEAPONRY: The controversial surveillance company NSO Group offered to give representatives of an American mobile-security firm “bags of cash” in exchange for access to global cellular networks, according to a whistleblower who has described the encounter in confidential disclosures to the Justice Department (The Washington Post). The whistleblower told Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) about his account, previously shared with the FBI in 2017 on a tip line. It raised Lieu’s suspicions that a crime might have occurred. “I’m a former prosecutor, and you would do cash transactions because you want to hide it,” Lieu told the Post. “When you have telecom companies and you have software companies, normally they don’t engage in cash transactions.” NSO is best known for its Pegasus spyware, which it leases to intelligence and law enforcement agencies in dozens of countries. Pegasus can turn a targeted smartphone into a potent surveillance tool, allowing operators to track the user’s locations, listen to calls, retrieve pictures and monitor social media activity, according to the Post and The New York Times, which recently published results of a yearlong investigation of Pegasus and NSO.

 

SPORTS: Using a social media platform to make it official on Tuesday, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady, 44, announced his decision to retire. “I have always believed the sport of football is an ‘all-in’ proposition — if a 100% competitive commitment isn’t there, you won’t succeed, and success is what I love so much about our game,” Brady said in an Instagram post. “This is difficult for me to write, but here it goes: I am not going to make that competitive commitment anymore. I have loved my NFL career, and now it is time to focus my time and energy on other things that require my attention” (The New York Times). 

THE CLOSER

And finally … An 8-year-old boy in Boise, Idaho, in December completed an imaginative book by hand featuring an exploding star atop a Christmas tree and some time travel. He decided to secretly slip his self-published work into a community library’s shelf of children’s books, thinking he would share his tale. 

 

Appreciative librarians found it, asked permission from the family and made the manuscript part of the library’s collection, bar code and all, even giving the boy a special award as a young novelist. 

 

The book now has a lengthy wait list of eager readers after KTVB, a news station in Boise, reported on the graphic novel’s inclusion in the library’s holdings. As of Saturday, there was a 55-person waitlist. The book, titled “The Adventures of Dillon Helbig’s Crismis,” is signed “by Dillon His Self” and vividly illustrated with colored pencils (The Washington Post).

 

“It was naughty-ish,” Dillon said of covertly donating his first novel without permission. But the result, he added, is “pretty cool.”

 

 

The Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree

 

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