GOOD MORNING! Welcome to Huddle, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this Tuesday, July 19. MORE SPICE THAN A BUSHEL OF CRABS — Maryland holds the only primary contest of July today, with a hot contest for governor and a drama-rich Baltimore City State's Attorney race. But the congressional race to watch is for Maryland's 4th district, which is an open seat because Rep. Anthony G. Brown is running for state attorney general. There are nine candidates for the Democratic primary in the deep-blue district, but the race seems to be centered on former Rep. Donna Edwards and Glenn Ivey, a former state's attorney for Prince George's County, high-level Hill staffer and Justice Department official. NOT OVER YET — "The Jan. 6 select committee once envisioned a single month packed with hearings. Then a fire hose of evidence came its way — and now its members have no interest in shutting or even slowing the spigot," write Kyle and Nicholas. "As its summer hearings show some signs of chipping at Donald Trump's electoral appeal, select panel members describe Thursday's hearing as only the last in a series. Committee members, aides and allies are emboldened by the public reaction to the information they're unearthing about the former president's actions and say their full sprint will continue, even past November." DESTINATION: INVESTIGATION — House Republicans, confident that they'll take control of the House and its oversight apparatus, are planning to go all-in on investigations of President Joe Biden's administration, from the Afghanistan withdrawal, to the formula shortage to the southern border and … you guessed it, Hunter Biden. "I think it's really going to be focused on holding the Biden administration accountable and getting answers. … It is going to be a lot of intense oversight," Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), who is expected to be majority leader if the chamber flips, said in a brief interview with Jordain. Much more on Republican's plans to pounce on investigations: It's not just Hunter Biden: Prepare for a 2023 packed with House GOP investigations KENTUCKY'S MEREDITH MELTDOWN — Remember that anti-abortion judicial nomination deal cooked up between President Joe Biden and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)? The White House's plans to nominate Chad Meredith dissolved last week, with both McConnell and the administration blaming Kentucky's junior Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) for refusing to sign off. Paul aired his side of the story on Monday, how the McConnell-Biden deal was secret and how it was "a little bit insulting" for him to learn about the nomination from an FBI background check. "McConnell's to blame for tanking this because he tried to do it secretly, Democrats caught wind up in the state. And they also tried to do it secret[ly]" and go around McConnell's home state partner, Paul told reporters. "We never heard about it from McConnell's office. And his people simply said, 'you can't do this but we can.' You know, 'we're so powerful, we can do whatever we want.'" Burgess explores the longstanding odd-couple dynamic between Paul and McConnell… who are often not aligned, despite being in the same party and representing the same state. Read more: Rand lights into McConnell over 'secret' judicial deal CHIPS PLUS… WHAT, EXACTLY? — A bipartisan group of senators met Monday night on the semiconductor chip and onetime China competition bill that the Senate could start procedural action on as soon as today. After "Endless Frontiers'' and "USICA," we're now talking about "CHIPS plus"... aka $52 billion in support for the semiconductor industry, plus…provisions that lawmakers are still hashing out. "We've got a short amount of time to persuade people that there is more that has to be incorporated into the CHIP plus package as proposed," Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), an original co-sponsor of the competitiveness bill, told reporters after the meeting. Young hopes to include the commerce and trade titles left over from the broader bill negotiations that have been largely scuttled, along with National Science Foundation funding. Young is trying to build a coalition to make the "plus" part of the package as robust as possible. "He wants an outcome like everyone else in that room," Young said of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.). |
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