 Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: Texas Republicans could release their new congressional map as soon as today; one scenario has it add five new seats that President Trump would have carried by 10 or more points. At risk are Democratic Reps. Henry Cuellar, Vicente Gonzalez, Julie Johnson, Greg Casar, and Lloyd Doggett. Playbook: Redrawing congressional maps alone won’t help the GOP hold the House in the midterms, said one Republican operative. “If we are relying on redistricting to hold the majorities, we have bigger issues.” Axios: Trump has netted $1.2 billion in settlements “from 13 of the most powerful players in academia, law, media and tech.” White House- President Trump said he had been briefed on the shooting in Manhattan that left four people dead. “I trust our Law Enforcement Agencies to get to the bottom of why this crazed lunatic committed such a senseless act of violence,” he posted on Truth Social.
- The president suggested Rupert Murdoch wants to settle the suit Trump filed against his companies over a Wall Street Journal report on a bawdy greeting Trump sent Jeffrey Epstein (though Murdoch has not confirmed).
Congress- The House Oversight Committee rejected a request from Ghislaine Maxwell for immunity in exchange for testimony about Jeffrey Epstein.
- The White House is lobbying Republicans to oppose a ban on congressional stock trading because “senators plan to offer a substitute: a bill that would extend the stock trading ban to POTUS & VP.” — Punchbowl
Outside the Beltway A person holds up a poster with slain NYPD officer Didarul Islam during a vigil led by New York City Mayor Eric Adams. Ryan Murphy/Reuters- Shane Tamura, the man who killed four people in a Manhattan office building Monday, was a former high school football player who believed he was suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy and wanted his brain to be studied, per a note police found in his pocket. Authorities believe he may have been targeting the NFL, but took the wrong elevator.
- The Senate confirmed Emil Bove to a lifetime appointment as a federal judge for the Southern District of New York; he denied threatening lawyers involved in the corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, though a whistleblower disputes his account. — WaPo
Inside the Beltway- The Environmental Protection Agency is officially moving forward with plans to kill a rule that gave it the authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has discussed running for elected office in Tennessee next year. — NBC
BusinessEconomy- US consumer confidence rose, with Americans’ expectations for the next six months jumping to the highest number since February.
- The International Monetary Fund raised its global growth forecast by 0.2 percentage points, as damage from President Trump’s tariffs so far has been milder than expected.
Courts- The government is in possession of a copy of the surveillance video from Jeffrey Epstein’s jail cell that includes the “missing minute” cut from a previously released version. — CBS
HealthNational Security- The National Security Agency’s top lawyer was fired after The Daily Wire wrote critically about her record working with Democrats. — NYT
Foreign PolicyPolls - People’s lives are getting better: That’s the macro takeaway from new Gallup research. Across 142 countries, a median of 33% of adults rated their lives as “thriving.” Despite geopolitical conflict, climate change, and technological disruption, “some progress is being made,” Gallup wrote.
TechnologyMedia- Pop star Katy Perry was spotted having dinner with former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. — TMZ
- The Freedom of the Press Foundation filed a complaint to investigate and potentially disbar FCC Chair Brendan Carr. — Status
Principals TeamEdited by Morgan Chalfant, deputy Washington editor With help from Elana Schor, senior Washington editor And Graph Massara, copy editor Contact our reporters: Burgess Everett, Eleanor Mueller, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |