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Scoop: Trump targets U.S. Institute of Peace and other federal boards

19 February 2025 at 14:33

President Trump plans to sign an executive order on Wednesday to eliminate, or dramatically diminish, a handful of federal advisory committees, according to administration officials.

Why it matters: The executive order, which the president plans to sign on Air Force One, will target organizations like the United States Institute of Peace and the Inter-American Foundation.


Driving the news: Trump will also require his Cabinet to scrub their departments and submit a list of additional committees and boards for termination within 30 days.

  • His goal is to pare back the number of agencies to a statutory minimum, which may be complicated because some of them have been authorized by Congress.
  • Where possible, he will fully eliminate agencies and advisory committees.

What we're hearing: Among the groups that Trump will single out for termination or reduction:

  • The Presidio Trust, a federal agency that manages large parts of the Presidio in Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) San Francisco district.
  • The U.S. African Development Foundation, which invests in African grassroots enterprises.
  • The Presidential Management Fellows Program, which is designed to train recent college and graduate school grads for the executive branch.
  • The Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid, which was founded to "advise the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and other U.S. Government agencies on development issues relating to foreign assistance," according to its charter.
  • The Health Equity Advisory Committee, which President Biden established in 2024, but Trump officials claim isn't actually meeting.
  • Federal Executive Boards, which were created by President Kennedy to help coordinate government activities in different regions across the country. Trump has already killed at least one of them.

Between the lines: The Institute for Peace is being targeted, in part, because officials believe it is a highly partisan organization, with its employees contributing to the Democratic Party.

  • And they consider the Inter-American Foundation, which was designed to invest in development projects across Latin America and the Caribbean, as a vehicle to justify Democratic theories about the root causes of migration.

Go deeper: A variety of councils are associated with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, including the Academic Research Council, the Community Bank Advisory Council and the Credit Union Advisory Council.

Scoop: Schumer looks to jam Republicans on Musk and billionaires

18 February 2025 at 17:16

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) plans to use this week's budget votes to force Republicans to choose between defending tax cuts for billionaires or defying President Trump and Elon Musk.

  • "It unifies Democrats from one end to the other. It is simple. It is easy to state. And it's true," Schumer told Axios.

Why it matters: After weeks of getting pummeled, Schumer is clearly relishing the prospect of changing the subject and forcing Republicans to play defense.


  • Schumer wants to turn the "vote-a-rama" on the Senate GOP's budget bill โ€” expected Thursday or Friday โ€” into a parade of tragic decisions by Trump and Musk โ€” all in service of making the rich even richer.
  • Look for amendments on Trump's proposed tax cuts, the president's funding and hiring freezes and Musk's deep cuts to federal agencies.
  • You can also expect an amendment blocking the GOP from changing tax rates if they cut funding from Medicare or Medicaid.

Zoom in: None of these Democratic-forced amendments will pass. But Schumer's goal is to make GOP senators own as many of the cuts and freezes as possible, or put them on the wrong side of a president who demands total loyalty.

  • Democrats have been on their back feet as Trump and Musk fire federal workers, cut off foreign aid and rewire the country's bureaucracy.
  • Democratic lawmakers feel powerless and are "pissed" at Democratic activist groups.
  • Schumer and Jeffries huddled last week for a strategy session on how they could pick a couple of issues โ€” such as cuts to Medicare and tax breaks for the wealthy โ€” to re-create the magic of 2018.

๐ŸšจNow Schumer has an opening to cast DOGE and the congressional GOP in the harshest possible light.

  • That includes programs highlighted by DOGE and those โ€” like Medicaid โ€” targeted by congressional Republicans.

Senate Democrats privately regroup ahead of GOP budget barrage

15 February 2025 at 11:03

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) summoned his caucus for a rare Saturday conference call ahead of a potential "vote-a-rama" next week.

Why it matters: Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham's (R-S.C.) budget package includes some $175 billion in border security spending, presenting a potential political minefield for Democratic senators.


Schumer's meeting lasted less than an hour.

  • The New York Democrat told his members to prepare a blitz of amendments to the GOP's budget resolution, according to multiple sources familiar with the call.
  • Schumer wants Democrats to remain focused on messaging that Republicans want to cut taxes for the wealthy at the expense of American families, he told members.

Zoom in: Schumer wasn't certain the GOP's budget resolution would come to the senate floor next week, as has been expected.

  • If Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) calls Graham's budget package to the floor next week, it would lead to a "vote-a-rama" โ€” in which senators can offer amendments for some 50 hours to score political points.

Between the lines: Schumer has given his members broad leeway on some controversial issues around immigration, like the Laken Riley Act.

  • Democratic activists are demanding their elected lawmakers mount a more forceful response to President Trump's dismantling of the federal government.
  • But the reality for incumbent Democrats is that they don't have any immediate way to stop Trump, short of appealing to the federal courts.
  • Senate Democrats staged an all-night talk fest last week to protest the confirmation of Russ Vought as Office of Budget and Management director. He was confirmed on a party-line vote.

The bottom line: Many lawmakers are deeply frustrated โ€” and even "pissed" โ€” with progressive pressure campaigns demanding they do more to oppose Trump, as Axios reported.

  • The budget process will allow Democrats to go on record defending policies that Trump and Republicans plan to cut.
  • House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and Schumer have been strategizing on how to draw attention to the GOP's proposed tax cuts and their efforts to trim spending from entitlement programs like Medicaid.

Editor's note: This article was updated with new details from the Senate Democratic call.

Scoop: New FTC chair endorses Trump's ability to fire commissioners of independent agencies

14 February 2025 at 06:36

The new chair of the Federal Trade Commission is putting his commissioners on notice that he thinks President Trump has the right to fire them if he wants to.

Why it matters: Andrew Ferguson, who replaced Lina Khan on Jan. 20, is the first head of an independent agency to embrace a controversial legal theory that could dramatically reshape the federal bureaucracy.


  • It will alarm progressive activists and Democratic lawmakers who are concerned that Trump wants to purge independent agencies like the FTC and the National Labor Relations Board.

Driving the news: Ferguson, a former solicitor general for the Commonwealth of Virginia, is filing a motion on Friday to formally change the FTC's legal position.

  • He is seizing on a letter sent to Congress this week by the acting solicitor general that the Trump Justice Department will seek to overturn a 90-year old Supreme Court decision known as "Humphrey's Executor."
  • In 1935, the court ruled that the president could only dismiss the head of an independent agency "for cause."
  • The new Trump approach holds that the heads and other board members can be fired based on the president's "will."

What they're saying: "I agree with every word of the Acting Solicitor General's letter. Humphrey's Executor was wrongly decided, is deeply anti-democratic, and ought to be overruled," Ferguson told Axios in an exclusive statement.

  • "I will be making a motion to ask my fellow Commissioners to agree to align the FTC's position on this issue with the President's position," he said.

Zoom out: Legal scholars โ€“ and the Supreme Court โ€“ are deeply divided on the constitutionality of Humphrey's Executor and which agencies it applies to.

  • In 2020, the court ruled the president had the power to fire the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Zoom in: Trump has already moved to fire the acting chair of the NLRB.

Go deeper: The FTC is beefing up its staff with a string of new hires who are skeptical of Big Tech.

Schumer's private plea to Senate Dems who are weighing retirement

13 February 2025 at 17:26

In private meetings with his in-cycle incumbents, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has asked for a small favor: If you're not going to run in 2026, please let me know soonest.

Why it matters: Two Democrats in potentially close races have now honored his request. A third โ€” Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) โ€” has yet to make an announcement.


  • Schumer craves clarity on the 2026 Senate map, according to people familiar with the matter.
  • He also wants time to consider the party's options, allocate resources and develop a comprehensive strategy to eat into the GOP's three-seat majority.

Driving the news: Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) on Thursday morning became the second senator in as many months to announce her retirement, following Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) in January.

  • Both decisions sent shockwaves throughout Washington.

The intrigue: That leaves Shaheen, 78, as the only open question for many senior Democrats.

  • She has publicly questioned her future, and multiple sources tell us she hasn't privately indicated whether she plans to run.
  • If Shaheen runs, Democrats like their chances of holding onto the seat.
  • Should she retire, New Hampshire will be much more expensive for Democrats, drawing resources away from other competitive races.

Zoom out: In other potentially competitive races, there's not much uncertainty around the Democrats' remaining 2026 incumbents.

  • Sens. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Ben Ray Lujรกn (D-N.M.), Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) are sending strong signals they plan to run for reelection.
  • While he's not an incumbent, there's great pessimism among senior Democratic sources that former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) won't try to return to the Senate in 2026.

Zoom in: Just as Peters' retirement opened the field in Michigan, several Democrats are indicating that they are interested in running in Minnesota, a state Vice President Harris won by 4 percentage points and Sen. Amy Klobuchar took by 16 points.

  • Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic 2024 vice presidential candidate, is interested, according to Politico.
  • There's also a possibility that former Sen. Al Franken, who was forced to resign during the height of the #metoo movement, could mount a comeback. He praised Smith on Thursday but didn't give any indication that he would run.
  • Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Angie Craig (D-Minn.) are also potential candidates, Axios reported earlier Thursday.

The bottom line: Retirements from proven winners are never welcomed, but they sting less when they are made early in an odd number year.

Top Democrats reopen 2017 playbook on Trump tax cuts

12 February 2025 at 16:56

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) met Wednesday to try to re-create the magic Democrats found in 2017, when they turned President Trump's original tax cuts into political poison for the GOP majorities.

Why it matters: Grassroots Democrats are demanding to see real action immediately. But top Democrats are eyeing a different date: November 2026.


  • Their goal is to develop a unified message ahead of the midterms and take back at least one chamber of Congress.
  • They'll have to temper the expectations of activists who want quicker results, while also keeping them motivated to support Democrats in the coming campaigns.

Zoom in: Democratic leaders firmly think their life in the minority will be shorter if they seize on the right messaging opportunities, not every messaging opportunity.

  • They want to avoid responding to Trump's outrages du jour and develop a deeper narrative about what unified Republican control means for working families.

What's next: Democratic leaders are eyeing the 2018 midterms as a blueprint, when they made Trump's tax cuts so unpopular that Republicans barely mentioned it in their campaign messaging.

  • Democrats are salivating at the opportunity to message against even deeper tax cuts being paired with broad slashes in federal spending, especially on health care.

The bottom line: Democrats are powerless to stop the GOP's filibuster-proof plans to cut taxes and federal spending. But details of the Republican playbook read like a wishlist for Democratic campaign operatives.

  • The (at minimum) $1.5 trillion in spending cuts the GOP is considering, in addition to $4.5 trillion to pay for tax cuts, includes hundreds of billions in reduced Medicaid payments and cuts to food assistance and student loan aid.
  • "This is all about clearing the path to cutting taxes for billionaires, and making the American people foot the bill," Schumer said Wednesday from the Senate floor.

Trump nominations loom over Senate's cherished Munich trip

12 February 2025 at 16:56

Some 20 senators have their bags packed for the Munich Security Conference this weekend, but they are waiting on a final green light from Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) before heading to Andrews Air Force Base.

Why it matters: Thune has threatened to make the Senate work weekends before, but never with one of the year's most cherished CODELs hanging in the balance.


  • In an email to senators, Thune warned they may have to stay in town to vote on President Trump's nominations on Friday, sources familiar with the matter told Axios.
  • That would delay, and potentially cancel, their participation in the annual security conference, where many senators say that simply showing up is one of their most important messages. The conference runs from Friday to Sunday.
  • Allies are eager for insight into how Trump and a Republican Congress will handle everything from the war in Ukraine to redeveloping the Gaza Strip.

The other side: "I'm trying to hold the plane hostage," Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) joked to Axios.

  • He thinks senators should stay and get more nominations done through Friday.

Zoom out: Senators love their CODELs. They especially love the Munich Security Conference, where they can have weisswurst and sweet mustard for breakfast and helles beer at lunch. Generals and heads of state mill about in the Hotel Bayerischer Hof.

  • For Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who typically leads one of the larger delegations, it is an opportunity to take stock of what has worked and what hasn't.
  • His message this weekend will be "to assess why deterrence failed and make sure that never happens again, to make sure that aggression is not rewarded in a fashion," Graham told Axios.
  • He plans to introduce sanctions against Beijing that snap into effect if China invades Taiwan.

Zoom in: Trump has alarmed allies with his unorthodox approach to foreign policy, real estate diplomacy and land acquisitions โ€” and sometimes all three.

  • He has threatened significant tariffs on U.S. allies, offered to buy Greenland, make Canada the 51st state, turn Gaza into a "big real estate site" and proposed taking back control of the Panama Canal.
  • Senators can expect some awkward questions from foreign leaders on all of the above.

The bottom line: When asked if she's prepared to answer questions on those topics, Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) said she will "let those speak for themselves."

  • "The president obviously has a plan that he's working on, he is visiting with the leaders of many nations," she added. "So I would rather that he take the forefront."
  • "I'm infuriated and frustrated by the administration's seeming surrender and betrayal of Ukraine," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) "I imagine that view will find a lot of friends among the Europeans who have committed so much to this fight."

Musk's DOGE complicates Mike Johnson's government shutdown options

11 February 2025 at 17:34

Elon Musk's slash-and-burn approach is giving the White House genuine street cred with House conservatives. But it might not be enough to compensate for the outrage he's provoked among House Democrats.

Why it matters: If Democrats hold the line โ€” and withhold their votes to fund the government โ€” it will be exceedingly difficult for House Speaker Mike Johnson to avoid a government shutdown.


  • Musk is flipping the traditional equation, in which Democrats vote to fund the government and Republicans feel compelled to do so under duress.
  • While not all Democrats are on board with holding the government hostage to their anti-DOGE demands, many are clearly contemplating it.

Zoom in: For all the outraged Democrats that Johnson might lose because of Musk, he'll be on the hunt for Republican votes to replace them.

  • "It helps," said Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.). "However, the baseline needs to be intact at $2 trillion," he added, referring to how much spending he wants to cut in the (separate) reconciliation bill.
  • "That's just additional," said Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.). "We appreciate it, but that's not enough."
  • "We're excited to see it," said Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio). However, "you're looking at two different things. What DOGE is working on is mostly stuff that we have to deal with by March 14."

By the numbers: In the last few government funding votes, more Democrats than Republicans have voted to prevent a shutdown.

  • In December, Johnson lost 34 House conservatives on funding the government. In September, the number was even higher: 82 House Republicans voted against it.
  • In both cases, every House Democrat supported it.

House and Senate GOP go to war over reconciliation

11 February 2025 at 07:21

The House GOP says it's ready to go first on reconciliation, warning it won't even consider the Senate GOP's bill on the border, energy and defense.

Why it matters: This escalates the strategic fight between the two chambers over how to get the Trump tax cuts extended past this year โ€” while also adding billions in spending on deportation infrastructure and the military.


  • The Senate wants two bills, handling border security, energy and defense first. Tax cuts would come later this year.
  • The House wants one big bill, arguing it would be too hard to pass two distinct measures.
  • House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) plans to start marking up a House bill on Thursday or Friday, he told reporters on Tuesday.

Zoom in: Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has released text for the first bill. It's scheduled to be marked up at the committee level on Wednesday, putting pressure on the House to move faster.

  • House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told his deputies Monday that the House won't put a Senate two-track bill on the floor, Punchbowl first reported.
  • Johnson told Politico he plans to meet with Budget Committee Republicans on Tuesday evening.

Thune and Johnson vow to take DOGE spending cuts to the next level

10 February 2025 at 16:59

The GOP's Hill leaders are signaling their eagerness to back up Elon Musk by turning DOGE spending cuts into real legislation.

Why it matters: Musk's slash-and-burn cuts may be undone by the courts. But he's given congressional Republicans a blueprint for what's possible to cut.


  • "I think that anything that DOGE does will be factored into what we do up here," Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) told Axios.
  • "We are going to be codifying a lot of these changes," House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told reporters Monday, "and what they've uncovered is, frankly, shocking."

Zoom in: DOGE has gone from a meme to a machine in the last three weeks, sparking lawsuits and injunctions.

  • Judges have paused Musk's access to Treasury information and blocked more than 2,000 USAID employees from being put on leave.
  • More court activity is expected as Musk pounces from one agency to the next in search of DEI initiatives, bureaucratic bloat and other opportunities for spending cuts.

Zoom out: Republicans need to do some serious unifying if they want to pass party-line spending cuts. Ten GOP senators and 34 House members voted in December against the government funding stopgap.

  • But DOGE-inspired cuts might help get the House's rowdy Freedom Caucus and senators like Rand Paul (R-Ky.) to vote yes on some bills โ€” as long as specific cuts don't create new GOP "no" votes.

Reality check: Even if the House can pass anything, outside of budget reconciliation, the Senate GOP will need Democratic votes to overcome the 60-vote filibuster for spending bills.

  • Democrats are rallying in opposition to President Trump's spending freeze โ€” and are threatening to allow a government shutdown next month.

The bottom line: Musk's appeals to Congress on deep cuts could force Republicans to justify tough cuts to popular programs, and Democrats to defend funding some unpopular ones.

The big bet behind Chuck Schumer's shutdown warning

10 February 2025 at 16:58

The March 14 government funding deadline is becoming a crucial test of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) toughness in the opposition.

Why it matters: If House GOP leaders settle on a partisan funding package, Schumer is indicating he's willing to stand in the way and plunge into a government shutdown.


  • Schumer will need to keep seven Democratic senators from joining Senate Republicans on a filibuster vote, if all Republicans support the package.
  • "Senate Democrats will use our votes to help steady the ship for the American people," Schumer said Monday, in a clear warning to Republicans.
  • Negotiations are foundering and Republicans haven't made a unified top-line spending offer to Democrats, according to multiple sources.

Zoom out: Senate Democrats up for reelection in 2026 haven't been tested on whether they'll break with their party on a potential government shutdown.

The bottom line: A government shutdown vote is a tougher call than a procedural vote on a foreign policy.

  • Schumer scored a tactical and strategic victory last month as the Democrats stopped a vote on a pro-Israel GOP bill from coming to the floor. However, it took several emergency meetings to craft the response.
  • Now, Democratic leaders are confident a House spending bill that only relies on GOP votes would flop in the chamber, according to multiple sources familiar with the conversations.

Senate prepares to blow past Mike Johnson on Trump's reconciliation bill

7 February 2025 at 13:52

Senate Republicans are running a hurry-up offense ahead of Super Bowl Sunday that's putting House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on his heels.

Why it matters: The House is unlikely to reach an agreement on taxes and spending cuts before Johnson and President Trump meet in a New Orleans skybox on Sunday, aides and lawmakers conceded today.


  • That gives Senate Republicans all weekend โ€” and a dinner Friday at Mar-a-Lago โ€” to make their case for a two-bill approach, while House Republicans still debate how much to cut from the federal budget.
  • The latest deadline for Johnson's one-bill plan is "probably closer to Monday," he said this morning.

๐Ÿšจ "The time to act is now, and Senate Republicans are ready to roll," Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said on X, backing up Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.).

  • Graham released a budget resolution Friday to funnel hundreds of billions into border security, energy and defense.
  • "I hope the House will move forward soon, but we cannot allow this moment to pass, and we cannot let President Trump's America First Agenda stall," Graham said on X.
  • "This targeted bill on the border, energy, and national security is uniting," Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) posted about the plan. "We're ready to go."

Zoom in: Graham has scheduled committee hearings next week to debate and vote on the resolution, on Wednesday and Thursday.

  • Graham argued his bill will provide border funds faster, saying border czar Tom Homan "is running out of the funds necessary" to keep up the Trump team's immigration crackdown.
  • The Senate plan offsets the $342 billion in new spending.

Between the lines: Johnson is still claiming he's making progress.

  • "It's going very well, I'm very excited about where we are and the fact that we're going to be moving this forward," he said.
  • Graham's committee timeline will give Johnson and House Republicans until midweek to pass their own resolution.

The bottom line: Even if Graham's plan makes it through the Senate, there's no guarantee the House will be on board when its turn comes.

  • Graham was careful not to antagonize Johnson, who can't afford to lose more than one GOP vote on anything these days.

House GOP pleads for time after "intense" White House meeting

6 February 2025 at 17:34

House GOP leaders told White House officials Thursday they need another 24 hours on reconciliation, pleading for the Senate to let them figure it out.

Why it matters: After a four-plus-hour meeting in the White House, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) returned to the Capitol and said they were "close" to an agreement.


  • "I think probably by tonight we wrap it," he said.

Vice President Vance was in the room for the first part of the meeting, while President Trump was in and out after it became clear the meeting would be a marathon.

  • They wrapped in the Oval Office, where the president gave the lawmakers pens and coins.
  • Trump told the Republicans to "figure out" how to make his 2017 tax cuts permanent.

Zoom in: Johnson's optimism was publicly shared by other leaders who attended the meeting, including House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) and Budget Chair Jodey Arrington (R-Texas).

  • "Today was big," Arrington told reporters Thursday.
  • "It was pretty intense. The heat was on medium the whole time," House GOP Conference Chair Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) told us.

Reality check: Lawmakers didn't share any details of the kind of progress they made.

  • It's unclear if they made any headway on the yawning gap in how much spending they should cut, which ranges from $500 billion to $2 trillion.

Driving the news: In addition to his campaign promises, like "no taxes on tips," Trump dug up some provisions he didn't dwell on during the campaign, like ending tax breaks for sports teams and treating so-called "carried interest" as regular income, as Axios scooped Thursday.

  • The private equity industry responded quickly. "President Trump's historic [2017] law struck the right balance on carried interest and encouraged local investment, innovation and economic growth," said Drew Maloney, president and CEO of the American Investment Council.

Zoom out: Since Monday, House lawmakers have been acutely aware they have until Friday night to convince Trump their one-bill approach can carry his legislative priorities. That's when the Senate GOP will be dining at Mar-a-Lago.

  • Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) upped the pressure Wednesday by telling his colleagues that he'd move his budget reconciliation package next week.

The intrigue: Johnson and Arrington had different responses to the Senate's implicit threat.

  • "Our message to our friends and colleagues in the Senate is, allow the House to do its work," Johnson told reporters.
  • "We know that they're ready to go at any time," Arrington said. "That's a healthy push for the process on our end."

Two deadlines threaten Mike Johnson's precious plan for one, big budget bill

5 February 2025 at 16:32

Two deadlines are threatening to scuttle Speaker Mike Johnson's (R-La.) precious plan for one, big budget bill.

Why it matters: President Trump's Friday night dinner with senators at Mar-a-Lago is the soft deadline. Sen. Lindsey Graham's (R-S.C.) plan to move his own bill next week is the hard one.


  • Miss the first deadline, House Republicans fear, and the Senate will exploit their quality time with Trump to convince him of their two-bill approach.
  • Blow past the second one, and the Senate will be firmly in control of the process.
  • There's a real risk that "we're going to get jammed by the Senate," Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) told Axios on Wednesday at an Axios News Shapers event.

Between the lines: "I'm going to talk to Lindsey. He's a good friend. And he has to understand the reality of the House," Johnson told reporters Wednesday.

  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent paid his first official visit to Johnson Wednesday afternoon, huddling with Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith (R-Mo.) on the best way to turn the president's campaign promises into reality.
  • Republicans later went to the White House to applaud Trump for signing an executive order to ban transgender girls and women from female sports.
  • Some members were hopeful that Trump might be able to use a pull-aside meeting to help grease a deal, but they returned to the Capitol empty-handed.

The intrigue: Graham didn't provide a specific day for his budget committee markup next week. That gives Johnson and Co. a little more flexibility.

  • Some Republicans are privately discussing the prospect of voting against the Senate budget resolution if they send one over before the House reaches a compromise.
  • That would add another dimension of dysfunction and call into question Congress's ability to pass any of Trump's agenda with their thin margins.

The bottom line: The House Budget Committee remains at an impasse with Chair Jodey Arrington unable to pass a resolution out of his panel.

  • "I don't believe we're going to take the vote on the budget resolution this week," McClain predicted.

Tulsi Gabbard wins critical support from GOP Senate swing vote Todd Young

4 February 2025 at 07:27

Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) will support Tulsi Gabbard's confirmation for director of national intelligence.

Why it matters: Young was the key remaining swing vote ahead of the Senate Intel Committee vote.


  • Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) announced on Monday that she'll support Gabbard.
  • "It would befit you and be helpful for the way you're perceived by members of the Intelligence Committee" to say Edward Snowden harmed national security," Young told Gabbard at her confirmation hearing last week.
  • Gabbard repeatedly refused to call Snowden a traitor at the hearing.

Trump tariffs make Senate Republicans squirm

31 January 2025 at 13:17

Senate Republicans are holding their breath over President Trump's tariffs, which kick in Saturday against Canada, Mexico and China.

Why it matters: Many senators spent months telling Axios they saw the move from Trump more as a negotiating tactic. But some were concerned about what would happen if he followed through.


๐Ÿšจ Now, sweeping 25% tariffs start this weekend on Canadian and Mexican imports โ€” and 10% on Chinese goods, the White House said Friday. All three countries have vowed to retaliate against broad tariffs.

  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) told Axios in August that "across-the-board tariffs is not something I have been for in the past." Thune is open to the selective use of tariffs.
  • Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) described Trump's tariffs promises as potentially "problematic."
  • Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), a former Senate Commerce Committee chair, also told Axios in August he's listening, but "not convinced that's the best approach."

Between the lines: Senators often cite concerns about tariffs leading to inflated prices for Americans โ€” after a campaign cycle where Republicans repeatedly said former President Biden's policies led to inflation.

Zoom in: More tenured senators, especially free traders, have learned the value of waiting instead of staking out positions Trump can upend at any moment.

  • Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is taking a "wait-and-see attitude," he told Reuters. Iowa is a big farm goods exporter.
  • "Normally I'd be stronger in my comments because I am a free trader. I used to be in the majority when free trading was a majority of the Congress, but now I am in the minority," he said.

๐Ÿ˜ˆ The newer senators are on Trump's side, and they're content to let him cook.

  • "Everybody runs through the streets saying, 'The sky is falling! The sky is falling!' but it doesn't fall," Sen. Jim Justice (R-W.V.) told Reuters.

Zoom out: The list of surprised leaders stretches beyond the Senate.

  • "I don't believe that will happen," House Speaker Mike Johnson said earlier this week about across-the-board tariffs.

Scoop: Democrats ready to fight unwanted candidates in Senate primaries

30 January 2025 at 16:56

New Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee chair Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand has been privately indicating she's prepared to intervene in contested primaries.

Why it matters: Senate Democrats want to avoid the GOP's Obama-era pain of watching preferred candidates lose primaries to unelectable newcomers.


  • Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) know their ability to claw their way back to the majority starts with candidates who are built for the general election.
  • The top target: Getting the right candidates in three of the most competitive races of the 2026 cycle โ€” Maine, North Carolina and now Michigan.

Zoom in: At a private DSCC fundraiser on Wednesday night, Gillibrand told donors that Roy Cooper, the former North Carolina governor, would be a "formidable candidate," according to people familiar with the matter.

  • Cooper has yet to decide whether to run, but he's clearly indicated he's considering it and used his farewell address to say, "I am not done."
  • A big announcement from Cooper would help offset fears of losing other seats โ€” especially if Gov. Brian Kemp (R-Ga.) decides to challenge Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.).

Democrats were stunned by Sen. Gary Peters' (D-Mich.) surprise announcement he won't seek a third term, opening a primary they thought would be closed.

The bottom line: In these MAGA times, the NRSC is typically left with whatever candidate President Trump endorses.

  • Schumer and Gillibrand don't have that kind of power, but they clearly want to avoid intra-party fights and save their resources for the general election.
  • "As always, the DSCC evaluates every primary on a case-by-case basis and doesn't take any options off the table," a DSCC aide said.

Democrats pounce as Trump retreats on federal spending freeze

Top congressional Democrats smell blood over President Trump's federal spending freeze.

Why it matters: The base is loving the party's muscular signs of life and wants more. Phone lines lit up in Democratic offices on Wednesday, sources told Axios.


  • "This is only the beginning," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) told House Dems on an emergency call Wednesday afternoon.
  • House Democrats are planning a "day of action" Thursday on the funding freeze, even after the White House withdrew the memo and blamed media coverage for the public's confusion.

Zoom in: The Trump White House is in retreat.

  • Top Trump advisers said the memo was an unforced error and skipped the proper channels, the N.Y. Times reported on Wednesday.

Now, Democrats will try to turn the public backlash into durable opposition to other (and more popular) parts of his agenda.

  • Senate Dems will flood the floor into the overnight hours Wednesday night with speeches about the dangers of Trump's move.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has demanded the creation of "strike teams" to combat the budget reconciliation plan by Republicans, sources tell Axios.

The bottom line: After weeks of internal frustration over his leadership, Schumer has taken a heavier hand.

  • Schumer obsesses over issue polling and privately acknowledges that some of Trump's priorities play well with voters.
  • But the magnitude and scope of the OMB memo jumped out to Schumer and leadership as a massive overstep by Trump.

Democrats bite back against Trump's purges and freezes

President Trump's freezing of federal aid and grants and his mass firing of inspector generals has quickly shocked congressional Democrats into a coordinated resistance movement.

Why it matters: One week after the 2025 inauguration, it feels more like the winter of 2017.


  • Democrats have flipped overnight from retreat to obstruction after Trump fired government watchdogs and froze (some) government spending.

They have no plans to stop unless or until Trump backs down.

  • "This is about Trump wanting to seize control of everything," Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) told reporters Tuesday.

Zoom in: A coherent Democratic counteroffensive is starting to emerge.

  • Make noise: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' (D-N.Y.) messaging arm urged House Dems to hold press conferences and go live on social media. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) Democrats audibled Tuesday's press conference from Jan. 6 pardons to Trump's spending freeze.
  • Block bills: Senate Dems filibustered a GOP bill sanctioning the International Criminal Court (ICC). Democrats were resigned on Monday that they'd be jammed on the bill. Now they know they can increase their negotiating position if they stay unified.
  • Protest votes: Nearly two dozen Senate Democrats voted against Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's confirmation, a day after the chamber voted unanimously to advance his nomination.
  • Lawsuits: A federal judge blocked Trump's spending freeze plans on Tuesday. But all day, Democrats decried Trump's move. The lawsuit will give them time to create a narrative about the real-world impact of the cuts. Meanwhile, GOP lawmakers will be hearing from their (potentially) angry constituents.

The bottom line: The all-day rage session was convenient for Schumer, who'd rather talk about Trump than a soon-to-be-open Michigan Senate seat. Gary Peters surprised the Hill today by announcing he won't run for reelection.

Scoop: Pete Buttigieg taking "serious look" at Michigan Senate race in 2026

28 January 2025 at 07:00

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is "taking a serious look" at running for the Michigan senate seat left open by the surprise retirement of Sen. Gary Peters, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: Buttigieg would bring his national fundraising network to what is expected to be one of the most expensive Senate races in the country.


  • "Pete is exploring all of his options on how he can be helpful and continue to serve," said a person close to Buttigieg.
  • "He's honored to be mentioned for this and he's taking a serious look."

What he's saying: "Senator Gary Peters has served with great integrity, focus, and expertise. It was a pleasure working with him as Secretary to deliver good policies for our country and key transportation projects in Michigan," Buttieg posted today on X.

Zoom in: Buttigieg rocketed to the top of the Democratic politics with his long-shot bid to become the party's nominee in 2020, ultimately winning the Iowa caucuses.

  • The former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, had announced his plans to move to Michigan and raise his two young children in his husband's home state.
  • He was expected to consider a bid for governor.

Zoom out: In the 2024 election, Buttigieg helped former President Biden raise money, and he moonlighted as one the campaign's top surrogates and fundraisers.

  • Many donors interpreted his enthusiasm as a clear sign that he planned to run statewide in 2026 or for president in 2028.

Editor's note: This article has been updated with comment by Buttigieg.

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