GOOD MORNING! Welcome to Huddle, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this Monday, July 31, where we hope Washingtonians are in one piece after that crazy storm on Saturday that toppled trees everywhere. WHAT’S NEXT FOR GOP BIDEN PROBES House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) will hold a long-sought transcribed interview with former Hunter Biden associate Devon Archer today as Republicans continue one of their most high-profile investigations during the August recess. Republicans view Archer as a key witness with first-hand knowledge of Hunter Biden’s business deals, including his work in Ukraine and China. They’re also hoping he will help them find an elusive direct link to President Joe Biden, which hasn’t yet emerged. Comer said that he’s working to set up additional depositions, including with another Hunter Biden associate, Rob Walker. And he warned that if Archer once again cancels his appearance, he could be held in contempt of Congress. Side note: There was some weekend drama with legal sparring over when Archer should report to prison on unrelated charges, but his attorneys told Kyle Cheney and Jordain they didn’t think it was related to his scheduled testimony. Comer is also preparing to release a transcript of an interview the committee conducted last month with a former FBI supervisory special agent as part of the panel’s probe into the years-long federal Hunter Biden investigation. A GOP aide said that the witness is currently reviewing the transcript — a customary step before release — but that Comer intends to make it public once the review is complete. House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), meanwhile, is also working to schedule closed-door interviews as part of the GOP’s investigation into IRS whistleblower allegations that the Justice Department hampered the Hunter Biden investigation. Attorney General Merrick Garland — who has denied those allegations — is already scheduled to testify before the panel in September. Jordan has already authorized — but not yet served — subpoenas as part of the probe. Negotiations with the Justice Department are ongoing, but Jordan said he isn’t ruling out ultimately compelling the interviews. His focus for now is locking in sit-downs for a handful of people who were present for an Oct. 7 meeting that plays a central role in whistleblower Gary Shapley’s interference allegations. Jordan wants to talk to the individuals before Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss, who oversees the Hunter Biden probe, speaks to the Judiciary Committee. The DOJ has offered to make Weiss available to testify publicly after the August recess. — Jordain Carney McCAUL’S NEXT SUBPOENA MOVES House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul told Huddle he’s still mulling — but hasn’t decided — whether to pursue contempt of Congress allegations against Secretary of State Antony Blinken. McCaul (R-Texas) is demanding documents from the State Department related to the creation of an after-action review of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. If he doesn’t get them by the second anniversary of that withdrawal, McCaul said he could try to hold Blinken in contempt of Congress. “I wish they would comply with this, and we're trying to get them to cooperate, and it's very specifically targeted,” McCaul said in a brief interview. The subpoena, issued July 18, set an initial deadline of July 25 for compliance. The two-year anniversary of the U.S. withdrawal is Aug. 30. The view from Foggy Bottom: State Department spokesperson Matt Miller called it “disappointing that just days after receiving yet another production of documents that address the subpoena, Chairman McCaul is once again circumventing our continued negotiations to threaten a contempt vote.” The department would “work in good faith” to comply, Miller added in a statement: “This isn’t a process that should play out via threats through the press.” Not the first time: This playbook has worked for McCaul before. The lawmaker issued a similar contempt threat back in May over the State Department’s refusal to allow Foreign Affairs Committee members to view a four-page dissent cable about the Taliban’s 2021 advance in Afghanistan. The Texas Republican ultimately won that fight, withdrawing his contempt threat after Blinken allowed committee members to view the full cable. VANCE’S DOJ HOLDS REMAIN When it comes to Senate holds, Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) has dominated the conversation with his blockade of military promotions. But Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) has a similar blanket hold on Justice Department nominees, and Vance tells Huddle it's nowhere near a resolution. “If Merrick Garland takes some affirmative steps to depoliticize this agency, I’d release the holds. But until he does, we're not going to do it,” Vance said last week. “We haven’t heard from the Department of Justice at all.” Vance first pledged in mid-June to “grind [Garland’s] department to a halt” in the aftermath of former President Donald Trump’s second indictment, objecting to quick consideration of DOJ nominees (with an exception for the Marshals Service). DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the blockade. Sore feelings: Democrats left Washington fuming over the lingering holds, with Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) calling it “beyond disappointing and beyond frustrating” that Vance’s hold was blocking a U.S. attorney nomination in California and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) venting about military and diplomatic holds. “For those people who say they're concerned about our ability to compete with the Peoples' Republic of China and Russians, they're doing the work of the PRC and the Russians,” Shaheen told Huddle. Related read: GOP splits further over Tuberville’s military blockade as it stretches through summer, by Burgess and Olivia EXCLUSIVE: TRUMP BUDGET ALUM LAUNCHES THINK TANK Former Trump budget aide Paul Winfree is launching his own economic think tank — just as Republicans gear up for a government funding fight. The Economic Policy Innovation Center, or EPIC, will focus on the country’s long-term fiscal picture, advising GOP presidential candidates and educating members of Congress about basic fiscal issues and Republican priorities, with an emphasis on the federal budget and annual spending bills. Winfree, who has overseen economic policy at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said GOP presidential campaigns and newish Republican members have so far been eager to learn about curbing federal spending and upcoming fiscal fights, which include the expiration of Trump tax cuts and another debt ceiling deadline in 2025. — Caitlin Emma
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