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Welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. I’m Abby Livingston, returning with your Sunday preview of everything you need to know about the week ahead in Washington: the Dems’ generational warfare, Gabbard’s Assad problem, Durbin retirement game theory, and much more…
By the way, if you missed yesterday’s special Saturday episode of The Powers That Be, I got on the line with Puck’s executive editor, Ben Landy, to discuss the mounting resistance to Pete Hegseth’s nomination, the latest Democratic infighting, and which G.O.P. senators might throw a wrench in Trump’s transition. Click here to listen.
Let’s jump in…
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| King of the Hill: Rep. Jamie Raskin |
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| The 61-year-old Maryland Democrat led a bloodless coup this week, snatching the ranking membership of the Judiciary committee from the much older Jerry Nadler and setting fire to the party’s rule book for seniority in the process. (Yes, 61 is still considered spry in Capitol Hill years…)
Now, with Raskin moving over to Judiciary, his top spot on the powerful House Oversight committee is open, setting up another generational fight between (the actually young) A.O.C. and the more senior member Gerry Connolly. Oversight is the House’s main investigative committee, has staggering subpoena power for the majority, and the executive branch is often the sweet spot of its remit. Obviously, the committee’s tendencies depend on which party is in charge of both the House and Oval. |
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| Democrats in the minority mostly derive their power from hearings, which are increasingly becoming viral grievance sessions and C-SPAN theater. Oversight would be an enormous step up for A.O.C, who is still a fairly junior member and has yet to pick up an assignment on one of the “A” committees (Approps, E&C, Ways & Means). Her ability to win a ranking member slot would be a big deal given her age and viral, anti-establishment celebrity. But her ascent would be a sign that the party values proficiency in modern media tactics over old-school institutional knowledge.
Whether or not one is a fan of A.O.C., she is undeniably an organized and strategic interrogator. If Democrats choose A.O.C. along with Raskin—who has the Judiciary slot locked up—it would signal that public presentation is a priority during their time in the powerless minority. |
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| This week, all eyes will be on the House, where Republican elders who serve on the steering committee will hear presentations from aspiring committee chairs and vote on their recommendations. The biggest battle may be on the Energy and Commerce committee, which has been one of the most coveted chairmanships, between Reps. Brett Guthrie of Kentucky and Bob Latta of Ohio. There’s also the bake-off at Financial Services between Reps. Andy Barr of Kentucky, French Hill of Arkansas, Bill Huizenga of Michigan, and Frank Lucas of Oklahoma. A conference vote is expected the week of December 16, with the conference following the steering committee’s vote.
However, the most interesting leadership race is on the Democratic side, as I previewed on Friday, at the Agriculture Committee of all places. Ag is historically an afterthought in Washington power circles, but the present Democratic battle for ranking membership has morphed into a generational proxy war within the party. Dems still need to fill out their steering committee, and we expect this battle—along with the A.O.C. vs. Connolly showdown—to last into the week of December 16 as well. |
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| The Syrian uprising dominated the Sunday shows, and the chatter in D.C. circles is that the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad’s government could have a direct impact on Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination for director of national intelligence. After all, the former Democratic congresswoman turned MAGA celebrity has a history of sympathy toward the brutal dictator’s regime, which will surely come up during her confirmation hearings. (Among other things, she traveled to Syria in the twilight of the Obama administration and met with Assad.) Interestingly, Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin noted on State of the Union that Gabbard was “100 percent qualified” to lead the intelligence community. So she should have some support. |
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| For what it’s worth, Mullin also defended embattled Pentagon nominee Pete Hegseth over his alleged drinking problem, denying that Hegseth ever had one, and noting—not incorrectly—that the media and the political class is filled with lushes. And while he’s not wrong that “there is a lot of alcohol that flows through Washington, D.C.,” it seems that leading the world’s most lethal military is a slightly different mandate than reading from a teleprompter without slurring or showing up on time for House votes.
Mullin, of course, belongs to a younger generation of Trumpy Senate Republicans, and while he questioned Matt Gaetz’s failed nomination to lead D.O.J., he can be expected to support most of Trump’s picks. More intriguing, perhaps, is the roster of Republicans who stayed off the Sunday shows, including Susan Collins, John Curtis, Mitch McConnell, Lisa Murkowski, Thom Tillis, and Joni Ernst. This week, at least, these closely watched senators—any four of whom could kill a nominee’s chances—are keeping their hands hidden.
Meanwhile, Trump sat down with Kristen Welker of Meet the Press, reiterating that those convicted for participating in the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the Capitol will be pardoned. He then added that members of Congress who participated in the January 6 House investigation—specifically former Rep. Liz Cheney—“should go to jail.” Though he said he would not personally direct his putative Justice Department leaders—Pam Bondi for A.G. and Kash Patel at F.B.I.—to take action against them. Trump also restated his support for doing away with birthright citizenship (it’s in the Constitution), but he did express a willingness to work with Democrats on DACA. “We have to do something about the Dreamers because these are people that have been brought here at a very young age,” Trump said. “Many of these are middle-aged people now. They don’t even speak the language of their country. And yes, we’re going to do something about the Dreamers.” |
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| Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, appeared on CNN this morning and fielded the question on the minds of everyone in the upper chamber (and Illinois): Will the 80-year-old, longstanding Senate Democratic whip retire at the end of his term in January 2027? Durbin deferred, telling Jake Tapper that he’ll make his decision at the beginning of next year, the usual timing for Senate reelection/retirement announcements. Durbin is an absolute institution in Illinois and congressional politics: elected to the House in 1982 and the Senate in 1996, he also helped shepherd his freshman Senate colleague, Barack Obama, through his march to the presidency.
A Durbin retirement would, of course, set off a leadership change in the Senate, and president pro tempore Patty Murray is the obvious contender to watch. She’s the chamber’s most-senior Democrat, has had two successful runs as D.S.C.C. chair, is a savvy, always-on-message tactician, and she’s well-regarded around the Hill. She also briefly flirted with challenging Durbin, in 2016, during the leadership shuffle that followed the late Harry Reid’s retirement. (Another source this morning suggested keeping an eye on Amy Klobuchar, too.) |
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| This also raises the question of who would take Durbin’s seat. Illinois hasn’t had a true, open-seat race for the U.S. Senate since 2010. (The last time there was an open Dem primary, in 2016, the D.S.C.C. was anxious to unseat Republican Mark Kirk and anointed Tammy Duckworth, who faced only nominal competition in the primary.) Illinois is now a solidly Democratic state, and the party tends to take a more hands-off approach while picking nominees. Which means everybody in Illinois Democratic politics is seeing a future senator in the mirror each morning.
I reached out to some Illinois insiders, and the Democrats to watch include current House members Robin Kelly, Raja Krishnamoorthi, and Lauren Underwood, as well as Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton. “Once a couple get in, the dam breaks,” an Illinois Democrat told me this morning. “We expect a robust field because there’s enormous pent-up demand.”
Krishnamoorthi, Kelly, and Underwood all have at least seven figures in cash on hand—usually a tell of Senate ambitions. Krishnamoorthi, specifically, is an astonishing fundraiser, sitting on $18.5 million cash. Such a kingly sum would normally drive senior House Democrats crazy (in their minds, all extra cash should be funneled into the D.C.C.C.), but the third-term congressman raised or donated another $8.6 million to the committee and colleagues.
Underwood, meanwhile, came to Congress as a House frontliner, meaning she muscled through a tough race and is no stranger to a multimillion-dollar campaign price tag. Kelly, for her part, has intrigued me over the past year: Elected in a 2013 special, she eyed a potential leadership race, contingent on Democrats winning back the House. That didn’t come to pass, but the Chicago congresswoman still flexed her fundraising muscles, raising north of $2.5 million for the D.C.C.C. and colleagues. She now has $2 million in cash on hand. So regardless of whether she decides to make another bid for leadership—or considers a Senate run—she’s an increasingly formidable Democratic player. |
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| FOUR STORIES WE’RE TALKING ABOUT |
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| Hollywood P.R. Wars |
| Unraveling a once-mighty P.R. firm’s suit against defectors. |
| MATTHEW BELLONI |
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| Blazy-Chanel News |
| Behind the scenes of Matthieu Blazy’s exit from Kering. |
| LAUREN SHERMAN |
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| The Hegseth Sitch |
| Plus, the implications on other Trump appointees’ chances. |
| TARA PALMERI |
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