17:26
Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer is drawing a line in the sand and saying budget reconciliation is absolutely not an option for when it comes to bypassing the Republicans and their filibuster and raising the debt limit.
Manu Raju
(@mkraju)Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer just told me “can’t do it” when asked if the budget reconcilation process is on the table to raise the debt ceiling by the Oct. 18 deadline.
“Reconcilation is very risky, risking default and risking downgrade. Can’t do it,” he said
This comes with senate minority leader Mitch McConnell writing directly to Joe Biden to tell him get Schumer and Pelosi to essentially get behind budget reconciliation because Republicans aren’t budging.
Leader McConnell
(@LeaderMcConnell)My letter to President Biden this morning on congressional Democrats’ duty to handle the debt limit: pic.twitter.com/U3G9QMPJwY
So let us recap at the options before us, as it pertains to raising the debt limit and avoiding general economic catastrophe:
Manu Raju
(@mkraju)Here are the options for raising debt limit: •An agreement to set the vote to suspend debt limit at a 51-vote threshold, but Republicans are objecting to that. (Any one senator can force a 60-vote threshold)
Manu Raju
(@mkraju)•Getting 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. But that would require 10 GOP votes, which isn’t happening
•Democrats using nuclear option to change filibuster rules to allow debt ceiling hike to advance with 51 votes. Manchin rejects this, so Dems don’t have the votes to do it
Manu Raju
(@mkraju)•Dems using reconciliation to circumvent a filibuster. That would require two marathon voting sessions on the floor — known as vote-a-rama — and could take at least two weeks to go through full legislative process without an agreement to speed it up. Ds have resisted this move
Again: Democrats, from Schumer to Biden, are very much against the idea of going the budget reconciliation route:
NowThis
(@nowthisnews)‘Why let McConnell off the hook?’ — Jen Psaki slams Republicans for spending like ‘drunken sailors’ during the previous administration pic.twitter.com/GykX3XWJfd
17:04
Here’s some more information on the suspicious vehicle found outside the US Supreme Court.
US Capitol police say they found no weapons in the vehicle. However:
Haley Talbot
(@haleytalbotnbc)Officer Bell said the suspect told them “the time for talking was done” when the officers first approached the illegally parked car
16:26
Police respond to suspicious vehicle outside US Supreme Court
US Capitol police responded to a suspicious vehicle outside the US Supreme Court.
Authorities have a 55-year-old man from Michigan in custody related to the incident.
Jonathan Martin
(@jmartNYT)This is growing depressingly routine https://t.co/PbZdXj1GL6
U.S. Capitol Police
(@CapitolPolice)The suspect has been identified as Dale Paul Melvin (DOB: 9/4/66) of Kimball, MI.
The nine justices began their new term on Monday with their first in-person oral arguments since the start of the pandemic.
Updated
16:21
Francis Collins to step down as NIH director
After nearly three decades at the agency, Francis Collins will be stepping down as director of the National Institutes of Health at the end of the year, he announced today.
Francis S. Collins
(@NIHDirector)It’s been a privilege & honor to serve as #NIH Director for over 12 years. However, I believe no person should hold this position for too long. So with deep gratitude to this great agency & the people who carry out its mission, I’ve decided to step down. https://t.co/rwUnKiW3V5
The 71 year-old physician-geneticist served as director for 12 years under three consecutive presidents – the first presidentially appointed NIH director to serve in more than one administration and the longest-serving NIH director.
Under his tenure, NIH’s budget grew by 38%, from $30bn in 2009 to $41.3bn in 2021.
“Dr. Francis Collins is one of the most important scientists of our time,” Joe Biden said in a statement. “After I was elected president, Dr. Collins was one of the first people I asked to stay in his role with the nation facing one of the worst public health crises in our history.”
“Millions of people will never know Dr. Collins saved their lives. Countless researchers will aspire to follow in his footsteps. And I will miss the counsel, expertise, and good humor of a brilliant mind and dear friend.”
15:59
Senate will hold planned Wednesday vote on debt ceiling suspension
With Republican leader Mitch McConnell holding fast to using the filibuster to block the Democrats, senate majority leader Chuck Schumer said the Senate will go forward with Wednesday’s planned vote to suspend the debt ceiling.
Tony Romm
(@TonyRomm)Schumer says Senate plans to hold planned Wed vote on debt ceiling suspension, giving GOP lawmakers a choice to bring “Republican-manufactured debt ceiling crisis to a swift end” or the country can barrel toward default
Tony Romm
(@TonyRomm)Schumer: “It is hard to believe one of America’s two major parties would be willing to jeopardize our entire economy… just because they dont like the party that won the election is following through on its agenda to help American families.”
15:41
Joe Biden spent yesterday in virtual meetings with the progressives of the Democratic party, talking about the $3.5tn reconciliation bill. White House press secretary Jen Psaki was upfront that the package would be “smaller than originally proposed”, with centrists Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema standing fast behind the notion that the package was too large, and that the meetings would be to determine priorities and bottom lines.
Today the meetings continue ahead of his Michigan trip:
Scott Wong
(@scottwongDC).@POTUS on Zoom call now with House Dem frontliners after meeting with progressives yesterday on his domestic agenda.
Biden heads to Michigan later today to sell Build Back Better
Updated
15:23
The Facebook whistleblower hearing is underway before the Senate and our west coast tech reporter Kari Paul will be live blogging the proceedings.
Frances Haugen, a 37 former Facebook employee, came forward on Sunday to accuse the social media giant of putting profit over safety.
Follow here:
15:10
Stephanie Grisham, former White House press secretary for Donald Trump. admitted on CNN today that she “probably wasn’t” honest during her interviews with Fox News and lied on at least one occasion about former White House chief of staff John Kelly, a retired four-star Marine Corps general.
Alli Hedges Maser
(@AllisonLHedges)Stephanie Grisham admits lying about John Kelly, calling it one of her “biggest regrets.”
Also says she “probably wasn’t” honest during her Fox News interviews. pic.twitter.com/Es1h3a1eod
In 2019, Grisham had said, “I worked with John Kelly and he was totally unequipped to handle the genius of our great president.”
Grisham, who is currently on a publicity tour for her tell-all book, I’ll Take Your Questions Now, said Trump told her to say that after Kelly disparaged Trump in some way. “I don’t speak that way,” she said. “He dictated that to me, word for word.”
“At the time, I felt, I was his spokesperson,” Grisham said. “He told me to do it. I knew he was probably sitting there, watching TV, waiting for it. And so I put it out. It’s one of my biggest regrets. I apologized to general Kelly and Mrs Kelly in the book about it.”
14:54
Former vice president Mike Pence went on Fox News to say that the media’s focus on the 6 January attack on the US Capitol – in which a pro-Trump mob chanted “Hang Mike Pence” – is all to distract from Joe Biden and his attempts to pass his domestic agenda.
“I believe that our entire focus today should be on the future,” Pence said.
14:45
Biden flies to Michigan as Washington stalemate grinds on
Ahoy there, live blog readers. Happy Tuesday.
Joe Biden heads to Michigan today to talk about … yep, what else, the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the reconciliation bill (also known as the Build Back Better Act).
The $1tn infrastructure bill looking to improve roads, bridges, public transit and broadband and the $3.5tn reconciliation bill focusing on the “human infrastructure” of social services and environmental measures are the hot topics of the week, with an 18 October deadline looming on the debt limit and Republicans pointing at these two bills as proof that spending by Democrats is out of control.
Republicans have been saying since July that they will not vote to raise the debt ceiling and that the Democrats will have to do it on their own. The Republicans are once again utilizing the filibuster, which requires 60 votes to break, and have twice blocked Democrats’ efforts to raise the debt limit. It’s expected they will block their efforts come Wednesday too.
The Democrats could raise the ceiling with a majority vote of 51, but they are already trying that with the spending bill and do not want to complicate affairs. They also point out that they voted with Republicans to raise the ceiling when Republicans and the Trump administration were spending wildly themselves.
The Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, sent a letter directly to Biden yesterday, bypassing the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, and the House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi, reiterating how serious he is about forcing Democrats to do this on their own.
Meanwhile, Democrats are continuing to suss out the ins and outs of reconciliation bill, with centrist senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema pushing to make the package smaller and progressives fighting to vote on it as is alongside the infrastructure bill so it has a better chance of passing.
Much more to come, of course.