Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: Members of the House Freedom Caucus voiced concerns about removing Speaker Mike Johnson during a meeting Thursday evening, despite their anger at Johnson over the foreign aid bill. Some members “were unhappy about the possibility of Johnson being replaced by” Majority Leader Steve Scalise. Playbook: Johnson has the benefit of support from Donald Trump, who posted to Truth Social yesterday about Europeans needing to do more to support Ukraine but did not come out against the aid package for Ukraine like some of his closest allies on Capitol Hill have. Trump purposefully “did not come down on one side or another,” one person familiar with his thinking said. The Early 202: Some House Republicans are encouraging Johnson to remove Reps. Chip Roy, Ralph Norman, and Thomas Massie from the powerful Rules Committee, “where the three of them wield an effective veto over the House agenda.” Axios: The Biden administration, which was notified ahead of time of Israel’s plans for the strike, “has warned Israel that escalation with Iran wouldn’t serve U.S. or Israeli interests.” White House- President Biden is giving a speech at the IBEW Construction and Maintenance Conference in Washington later today.
- Biden announced new sanctions on Iran targeting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran’s Defense Ministry, and Tehran’s missile and drone program in retaliation for the attack on Israel.
- White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan held a virtual meeting with Israeli Minister for Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer and national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi during which he raised U.S. concerns about a planned Israeli operation in Rafah.
- White House chief of staff Jeff Zients wants more federal employees to return to work.
Congress- Speaker Mike Johnson isn’t going to try to change the threshold for bringing a motion to vacate.
- The House overwhelmingly passed a resolution condemning Iran’s attack on Israel, but 14 members — 13 progressive Democrats and Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. — voted against it.
- The Senate is expected to take more votes today on legislation to extend Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Attorney General Merrick Garland penned a letter to Senate leaders urging them to pass the legislation before today’s deadline.
- House Republicans are losing another of their own: Rep. Jake LaTurner, R-Kans., said he will not seek reelection after this term. He has only been in Congress for three years and is 36.
- Wall Street firms BlackRock and MSCI steered billions of dollars in U.S. retirement savings and other investments to Chinese companies that the U.S. government says are tied to China’s military and human rights buses, an investigation by the House select committee on China found. — WSJ
- Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and retired Gen. Jack Keane wrote to Speaker Mike Johnson expressing strong support for the foreign aid package. “We support aiding Ukraine because that is the best way to help Americans; the best way to reduce the risk that future generations will have to take up arms in Europe, the Middle East, or Asia,” they wrote in the letter. “Winston Churchill warned that while free nations sleep, dictators plan. No nation is ever served by ignoring the ambitions of its enemies.”
- Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wisc., called Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla. “tubby” in an argument on the floor; Gaetz told reporters later Van Orden was “not a particularly intelligent individual.”
- New Jersey Rep. Donald Payne remains in the hospital more than a week after experiencing diabetes-related cardiac issues. “There has been no change in the congressman’s condition,” a spokesman for the Democrat said Thursday.
Outside the BeltwayMore than 100 pro-Palestinian student protesters were arrested after camping out at Columbia University. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s daughter was suspended from Barnard College for participating in the demonstration. CourtsPoland arrested and charged a man with assisting with a Russian plot to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. On the Trail- Donald Trump’s combined operation has 270,000 fewer unique donors than at this point in the 2020 race, “another troubling sign” for GOP fundraising this year. — FT
- Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign said he qualified for the ballot in Michigan via the Natural Law Party.
- President Biden twice suggested this week that cannibals ate the remains of his military veteran uncle, Ambrose Finnegan, but an official account indicates his body was lost at sea following a plane crash.
- David McCormick, the Pennsylvania Republican Senate candidate, sounds nervous about an upcoming New York Times story touching on his childhood biography.
National SecurityThe Justice Department is launching a new “specialized gun intelligence center” and carjacking task forces to reduce violent crime. — AP Foreign Policy- The U.S. vetoed a resolution at the United Nations that would have given Palestine full membership in the organization.
- The White House is renewing its effort to achieve an agreement for the normalization of ties between Saudi Arabia and Israel. — WSJ
- A helicopter crash in Kenya killed the country’s military chief Francis Ogolla.
Technology- Apple has removed WhatsApp and Threads from its app store in China, saying it was ordered to by the government. – WSJ
- Google has fired 28 employees after protesting labor conditions and the company’s contract to provide cloud computing and AI services to Israel’s government and military.
Media- U.S. Ambassador to Russia Lynne Tracy met Thursday with jailed Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in Moscow. “Despite the continued wait for the start of his trial, Evan remains in good spirits, buoyed by the continued messages of support,” the U.S. Embassy said in a message posted on X, along with the hashtag that journalism is not a crime.
- South Korean automaker Hyundai says it has paused advertising on X after antisemitic and pro-Nazi posts appeared next to its sponsored posted on the platform. — NBC
Big ReadSome pharmacists are afraid of being jailed for dispensing the FDA-approved misoprostol, which is prescribed for miscarriages, preventing stomach ulcers, and abortions, due to murky laws in states with bans on abortion, NBC says. In Idaho, where abortion became illegal with some exceptions after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe vs. Wade in 2022, the drug went from “something that wasn’t on the radar but now sends up an alert in the pharmacy,” one Boise pharmacist said. The Idaho Board of Pharmacy said it’s not providing guidance to pharmacists who dispense medications that could be used to terminate a pregnancy due to the “uniqueness of every situation.” Alison Tanner, senior legal counsel at the National Women’s Law Center, was quoted as saying, “Pharmacists are understandably scared by these incredibly strict abortion laws that have been enacted, and they are afraid that they might be charged with a felony simply for doing their job.” BlindspotStories that are being largely ignored by either left-leaning or right-leaning outlets, according to data from our partners at Ground News. What the Left isn’t reading: Denver plans to spend $90 million on services for new migrants after slashing funding for programs across city government agencies. What the Right isn’t reading: A new rule finalized by the Biden administration allows the lease of public property for conservation purposes just like oil companies lease land for drilling. Principals TeamEditors: Benjy Sarlin, Jordan Weissmann, Morgan Chalfant Editor-at-Large: Steve Clemons Reporters: Kadia Goba, Joseph Zeballos-Roig, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |