 Beltway NewslettersPunchbowl News: Rep. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., has hired President Trump’s pollster Tony Fabrizio for his reelection bid as he faces blowback from Trump Republicans and a GOP primary challenge. Playbook: Trump’s public schedule is relatively quiet this week as he pressures Republicans to get in line on his tax and spending bill. WaPo: Democratic Rep. JD Scholten of Iowa said he found GOP Sen. Joni Ernst’s non-apology for her comments on Medicaid cuts so “disrespectful to constituents” that he decided to challenge her for the Senate, even though his campaign was not ready yet. Axios: Nearly a third of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s workforce — roughly a thousand people — have so far left the organization under the second Trump administration. White House- The acting head of FEMA said he wasn’t aware the US had a hurricane season, baffling staff. — Reuters
Congress- Rep. Jerry Nadler wants the House Judiciary Committee to investigate an incident last week, in which ICE officers “barged” into Nadler’s office and arrested one of his aides.
Outside the Beltway- New York Lieutenant Gov. Antonio Delgado will challenge Gov. Kathy Hochul in next year’s Democratic gubernatorial primary. — NYT
- Texas lawmakers sent a bill to ban students from forming LGBTQ-themed clubs to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk.
Polls- Roughly eight in 10 voters believe that the Trump administration should restore funding for victim services, community violence prevention, and youth outreach, according to a new poll commissioned by the Alliance for Safety and Justice, a criminal justice reform group. The data, out this morning, follows news that the Justice Department would end hundreds of millions of dollars in grants.
 BusinessEconomy- Syria’s stock market reopened after a six-month hiatus.
- Madagascar is looking to the UAE to offset impacts of US tariffs. — Bloomberg
Courts- US prosecutors are pursuing a new investigation into Indian billionaire Gautam Adani regarding possible violations of Iran sanctions. — WSJ
- The Supreme Court agreed to take up a case from an Illinois Republican challenging mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day. It also declined to decide two cases focusing on state gun control laws.
Foreign Policy Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters - Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said he will seek a vote of confidence in parliament after nationalist candidate Karol Nawrocki won the country’s presidential election. Tusk is expected to win the vote, but the move reflects the political blow delivered to his centrist government by Nawrocki’s victory.
- The US offered Iran a deal over the weekend that would allow it to continue “limited low-level” uranium enrichment. — Axios
Technology- Ukraine is working on “a generation of drones designed to identify and shoot down other unmanned aerial vehicles.” — Bloomberg
- The Pentagon has withdrawn about 500 US troops from Syria, making good on plans laid earlier this year. — Fox News
Media- Comedian Marc Maron’s long-running podcast, WTF, is ending.
- The New York Times spent a couple weeks visiting Butterworth’s, a DC restaurant that’s a MAGA hotspot.
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, Kadia Goba, Eleanor Mueller, Shelby Talcott, David Weigel |