Monday, November 18, 2024

Trump transition dominates DC chatter

POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Nov 18, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO Playbook PM

By Bethany Irvine

THE CATCH-UP

WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT — “Trump confirms mass deportations will involve national emergency, military,” by WaPo’s Patrick Svitek: “Trump, in an early-morning post on social media, responded ‘TRUE!!!’ to a Nov. 8 post from TOM FITTON , a Trump ally … ‘GOOD NEWS: Reports are the incoming @RealDonaldTrump administration prepared to declare a national emergency and will use military assets to reverse the Biden invasion through a mass deportation program,’ Fitton wrote.”

Adds Emmy Martin: “As the president-elect plans to begin the process of deporting immigrants in the U.S. illegally in his first 100 days, Trump’s team is working to craft executive orders that can withstand legal challenges from immigration advocates to avoid a defeat like the one his 2017 Muslim ban faced.”

TRANSITION LATEST — It’s Monday afternoon, and with the new work week revving Washington back into motion, there’s a deluge of developments about DONALD TRUMP’s presidential transition. Here’s the latest:

Rep. Matt Gaetz walks outside the U.S. Capitol.

The House Ethics Committee will meet Wednesday and potentially vote on whether to release their long-awaited report on former Rep. Matt Gaetz's alleged sexual misconduct. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

Gaetz-keeping: The House Ethics Committee will meet Wednesday and potentially vote on whether to release their long-awaited report on former Rep. MATT GAETZ’s alleged sexual misconduct, Andrew Howard, Daniella Diaz and Rachael Bade report . Gaetz, you’ll recall, is Trump’s choice for attorney general.

Speaker MIKE JOHNSON has urged the committee not to release the report, and has touted his support for Gaetz’s nomination. But there are other considerations, as multiple senators have said that the report would be essential in deciding whether or not to confirm Gaetz — a showdown that’s “placing intense pressure on the historically bipartisan Ethics Committee.”

Mar-a-Lago mayhem: Meanwhile, tensions are growing between ELON MUSK and Trump adviser BORIS EPSHTEYN over the president-elect’s cabinet picks, Axios’ Sophia Cai reports . As some of Trump’s inner circle lament the billionaire’s influence in Trump’s selections, Musk and Epshteyn’s already-tense relationship “came to a head last Wednesday during a heated discussion at a dinner table in front of other guests at Trump's Mar-a-Lago club.”

“At one point during what the sources described as a ‘massive blowup’ and a ‘huge explosion,’ Musk accused Epshteyn of leaking details of Trump's transition — including personnel picks — to the media. … Epshteyn responded by telling Musk that he didn't know what he was talking about.”

The alleged confrontation came before Musk publicly weighed in over the weekend on his preference for Treasury secretary spot (he backs transition team co-chair HOWARD LUTNICK over hedge fund executive SCOTT BESSENT).

A name you should know: Trump is reportedly set to pick former JD VANCE staffer JAMES BRAID as his director of legislative affairs, Bloomberg’s Nancy Cook and Skylar Woodhouse report. “Braid has worked in Vance’s Senate office as deputy chief of staff and also worked for the Office of Management and Budget during Trump’s first term. If officially named to serve as the White House’s congressional liaison, he’ll be charged with pushing Trump’s legislative agenda on Capitol Hill.”

— Rubio’s successor: Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS announced on X he intends to interview and conduct “extensive vetting” on candidates in the next few weeks to fill Republican Sen. MARCO RUBIO’s Senate seat. Rubio is expected to resign in order to serve as Trump’s secretary of state. DeSantis said he’s expecting to make a selection “by the beginning of January.” Among the names in the mix: Lt. Gov. JEANETTE NUÑEZ, Florida AG ASHLEY MOODY, former Florida House Speaker JOSE OLIVA and DeSantis chief of staff JAMES UTHMEIER — though some in Trump’s inner circle are pushing for LARA TRUMP. More from Kimberly Leonard

— So the FCC won’t let me be: Trump’s choice for FCC chair, BRENDAN CARR, is vowing to go after big tech and has “outlined plans to remove regulations conservatives consider overbearing or outdated,” WSJ’s Drew FitzGerald reports. “Carr supports current efforts to ban TikTok in the U.S., citing national-security concerns … He has also urged the government to strip big tech companies like Alphabet and Meta Platforms of existing legal protections for the content they host.”

Speaking softly while carrying a big stick: Trump’s new White House Counsel, WILLIAM McGINLEY may have one of the toughest jobs in town, but the long-time GOP lawyer has “little appetite for drama or the spotlight,” Josh Gerstein writes. “‘This makes the McGinley pick the exception to the rule [in Trump world],’ said fellow longtime GOP election lawyer JAN BARAN. ‘He’s not a publicity hound.’”

Mahalo for your kokua: Among national security experts in both parties, alarm bells are ringing over Trump’s pick of TULSI GABBARD for director of national intelligence. Gabbard, a former Hawaii congresswoman, has a long history of comments supportive of Russia and critical of Western support for Ukraine — in addition to her extremely controversial meeting with brutal Syrian autocrat BASHAR AL-ASSAD, whom she later declined to describe as a “war criminal” or even a U.S. adversary. All of it is spurring fears that she could “undercut Ukraine, weaken U.S. national security and endanger intelligence ties with allies,” AP’s David Klepper, Ellen Knickmeyer and Edith Lederer report.

Good Monday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at birvine@politico.com.

 
5 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, emergency services personnel work to extinguish a fire following a Russian rocket attack in Odesa, Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 18, 2024. (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP)

Emergency services personnel work to extinguish a fire following a Russian rocket attack in Odesa, Ukraine, Nov. 18, 2024. | AP

1. RUSSIA-UKRAINE LATEST: The Kremlin has responded to President JOE BIDEN’s decision to allow Kyiv to use American long-range missiles to attack Russia, arguing that the controversial policy reversal is “adding fuel to the fire” and “provoking further escalation of tensions around this conflict,” AP’s Samya Kullab and Illia Novikov report from Kyiv.

Speaking to reporters, Kremlin spokesperson DMITRY PESKOV claimed that such a decision “fundamentally changes” the U.S.’s direct involvement in the conflict, and the AP notes that “Russian lawmakers and state media bashed the West over what they called an escalatory step, and threatened a harsh response.”

Will it all matter? Some experts say the delayed decision is “unlikely to be a gamechanger overall” on the battlefield, Reuters’ Tom Balmforth, Max Hunder and Lili Bayer report: “On the streets of Kyiv on Monday, the general feeling was that the decision would help, but that it had come far too late.”

2. JERSEY GIRL: New Jersey Rep. MIKIE SHERRILL is jumping into the state’s crowded gubernatorial race, posting a campaign kickoff video on X this morning. Sherrill is the sixth high-profile Democrat — and the only woman — to announce a run for the office, and has “already secured several endorsements, including the Laborers’ International Union of North America and, unofficially, from Democratic chairs in Essex, Middlesex and Passaic counties,” Matt Friedman reports.

The other Dems in the running: Newark Mayor RAS BARAKA, Jersey City Mayor STEVEN FULOP, former state Senate President STEVE SWEENEY, New Jersey Education Association President SEAN SPILLER and fellow Rep. JOSH GOTTHEIMER.

3. LET’S BE FRENEMIES: “‘Morning Joe’ hosts visited Mar-a-Lago for Trump meeting,” by Andrew Howard: “While this is the first face-to-face meeting Trump has had with the popular cable hosts in seven years, the president-elect has maintained an on-again off-again relationship with [JOE] SCARBOROUGH and [MIKA] BRZEZINSKI dating back years. … But the married hosts of MSNBC’s flagship morning program appear ready to turn the page, though they committed to viewers they would continue to hold Trump accountable.”

FWIW … Trump described the meeting as “extremely cordial” in an interview with Fox News this morning, stating that “to Make America Great Again, it is very important, if not vital, to have a free, fair and open media or press.”

4. SHADES OF BLUE: After white working class voters threw their support behind Donald Trump in 2020, Democrats hoped to do better with that voting bloc this year. They didn’t. Now, the party is facing a growing identity crisis as large numbers of blue-collar Americans feel “the Democratic Party does not fully grasp their struggles — and in some cases, disdains them outright,” NYT’s Katie Gluek reports.

A case study: Rep.-elect KRISTEN McDONALD RIVET (D-Mich.) said that for many voters in her area (a swingy area that includes Flint and its environs), high costs were not just an inconvenience. “They raised ‘fear in people, right, about their ability to make it.’ … To those voters, she said, litigating other subjects — whether Mr. Trump was a ‘fascist,’ for example, or the violence of the 2021 Capitol riot — simply felt less urgent.”

Related read: “After Democrats lost the working class, union leaders say it's time to 'reconstruct the Democratic Party,’” by NBC News’ Alex Seitz-Wald

5. MEDIAWATCH: “Associated Press to Cut Staff by 8%,” by NYT’s Ben Mullin: “In a note to employees Monday, the AP News Guild said that the cuts were the result of revenue declines … The note said that as many as 121 employees would be eligible for a buyout package, adding that managers said the buyouts aimed to avoid layoffs.”

 

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