GOOD MORNING! Welcome to Huddle, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this Tuesday, August 16, where we're watching the polls but also… the bear cam. WHAT TO DO WITH A WINDFALL — The Internal Revenue Service is looking at $80 billion and deciding what to do with it. The IRS has for years been unable to provide basic services like processing taxpayer returns on time or answering questions. So it tracks that staffing up across the agency could improve its basic operations. Republicans are framing the plus-up as a band of thugs ready to smack the tax dollars out of innocent Americans. The agency and the Biden administration say they need more personnel to crack down on tax cheats, and deliver the dollars that have been slipping through the cracks. And they're promising not to increase audit rates for those with incomes under $400,000. What are the tax collectors to do? Brian Faler digs into how the IRS plans to distribute the new dough. SWEET SUMMER SPENDING THREAT — Oct. 1 is when the new fiscal year begins and — spoiler alert — Congress is not on track to pass the 12 annual appropriations bills to fund the government. The need for a bipartisan stopgap spending bill is expected to float the federal government. At this point it's not clear how long that short term bill would last. The House Freedom Caucus has a recommendation. It wants to see current spending levels frozen until the 118th Congress is sworn in, banking on a GOP majority to legislate federal funding. In a Monday letter to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the group urged GOP leadership to reject any spending talks or proposals during the post-election "lame duck" session. Read more from Nancy. ESSENTIAL ENDORSEMENT IN INDIANA — In Indiana there has been a scramble to see who will run for the House seat left vacant earlier by the sudden death of Republican Rep. Jackie Walorski. Her husband has weighed in on who he'd like to see continue her legacy. Dean Swihart, Walorski's husband, announced Monday that he'd support Rudolph Yakym in the Nov. 8 special election to fill the rest of her term and the general election for the 118th Congress. Yakym is a former finance director for Walorski's congressional campaigns. The district is a GOP stronghold. "Rudy has spent years working in public service alongside my beloved wife and will fight for our district to protect our faith, families and communities," Swihart said in a statement issued from Walorski's campaign. "Rudy is a political outsider who has what it takes to stand up to the Pelosi-Biden agenda. He will fight to do the right thing, just as Jackie did every day of her career." BOYS CLUB — Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) wasn't surprised by Sen. Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) endorsement of Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) in their wild member-on-member matchup in Manhattan. "It doesn't surprise me. The old boys network is very, very close and they support each other," she told NY1. Marianne has more on the somewhat unexpected endorsement from the Senate majority leader, who is the first member of New York's congressional delegation to weigh in on the heated race between two influential House chairs. |
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