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2018年12月17日 星期一

The Hill's Morning Report — Trump backed into a corner as shutdown clock ticks down | No deal in sight as Washington gripped by investigations into Trump | Markets braced to hear Wednesday decision from Fed’s Powell | Latest ObamaCare ruling to resonate in 2020 | Health-care law appears headed back to Supreme Court | Trump lashes out as legal jeopardy mounts | White House turnstile: Mulvaney in as acting chief of staff; Zinke out at Interior

The Hill's Morning Report
 
 
 

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Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report and happy Monday! Our newsletter gets you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch, co-created by Jonathan Easley and Alexis Simendinger. (CLICK HERE to subscribe!) On Twitter, find us at @joneasley and @asimendinger.

 

Washington faces a partial government shutdown in five days and there doesn’t appear to be any urgency or a plan by lawmakers to negotiate a way around it.

 

Lawmakers in both chambers are back to work this week, but someone will have to blink to avoid a shutdown, as President Trump is demanding a spending bill with $5 billion for a border wall and Democrats are not budging from their offer of $1.3 billion.

 

The Hill: GOP leader faces Trump test in latest shutdown crisis.

The Associated Press: White House closer to partial shutdown with wall demand.

 

With the shutdown set to kick in at midnight on Dec. 21, Trump and lawmakers spent the weekend focused primarily on the swirl of investigations around the president.

 

It’s unclear what kind of bill Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who is retiring at the end of the year, will bring to the House floor for a vote. It’s unclear how Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) will treat anything that comes out of the House. And it’s unclear whether Trump will follow through on his threat to veto any spending bill that doesn’t give him the full $5 billion for the wall.

 

The New York Times: Can the GOP get lawmakers to show up and vote?

The Hill: House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) gets her swagger on.

 

One thing is certain: With Republicans in charge of the House and Senate and Trump in the White House, the GOP will shoulder the political fallout.

 

The president has backed himself in a corner here. Behind the scenes, GOP lawmakers are frustrated by Trump’s brinkmanship and by his indifference about what a shutdown would mean for his party.

 

The Hill: GOP set to be blamed for shutdown.

The Hill: Trump finds himself isolated in shutdown fight.

 

One other big thing to watch this week: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will speak on Wednesday at 2 p.m. after the central bank’s scheduled meeting.

 

The markets, which have been under pressure and experiencing historic volatility, are expecting a modest rate hike amid concerns that a global economic slowdown may be around the bend.

 

Trump has cast the recent bull market run as a reflection on his fiscal policies and he’s blamed the late-year swoon on expectations that rates will tighten.

 

The president, investors and corporate leaders will be watching Powell’s remarks closely, both for the Fed’s actions and for the chairman’s appraisal about where the economy is headed as we enter a presidential election cycle.

 

Reuters: Stocks steady as investors pin hopes on policy makers.

The Hill: A look at the week ahead.

 
LEADING THE DAY

POLITICS:  Health care: A federal judge in Texas struck down ObamaCare as unconstitutional a day before the deadline to sign up for coverage next year, raising new questions about the fate of former President Obama’s signature legislative achievement.

 

The New York Times: Texas judge strikes down ObamaCare as unconstitutional.

The Hill: Five takeaways from the ObamaCare court ruling.

 

The Affordable Care Act is likely headed to the U.S. Supreme Court once again, ensuring that health care will be a top issue as Trump seeks reelection.

 

Lawmakers in both parties questioned the ruling.

 

"[The Texas judge] could have taken a much more surgical approach and just struck down the individual mandate and kept the rest of the law intact. I believe it will be overturned.” – Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) on ABC News’s “This Week.”

 

The New York Times: Judge who halted Affordable Care Act is a conservative favorite.

The Hill: Obamacare signup period ends amid new uncertainty.

 

The dynamics will be fascinating to watch. Many conservatives were frustrated by the GOP’s inability to repeal the law after campaigning on that promise for years.

 

In that time, ObamaCare has become more popular and Trump has committed to preserving the law’s pre-existing conditions protections in coverage.

 

Democrats are thrilled to relitigate the matter and some expressed optimism that the court ruling would move the party to pursue “Medicare for all” legislation.

 

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The judge who ruled on the case was  appointed by former President George W. Bush and approved by voice vote in 2007 when Democrats were in control of the Senate. That hasn’t sat well with the left, as Chuck Todd noted on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an interview with Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.).

 

Todd: You brushed off this judge issue very quickly. Look, that was part of a deal you were a part of cutting back in '07. Was that a bad deal?

 

Schumer: No, there was no deal, I don't think, on this judge. He was a nominee to the district court. No one brought up anything. No one knew how he'd rule in the future. And you know, it's an awful ruling. Let's make no mistake about it.

 

Max Nisen: Celebration of ObamaCare’s death is again premature.

Ezra Klein: Court ruling a boon for “Medicare for all.”

 

More from campaigns and politics … Former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) lead among Democrats in Iowa (Des Moines Register) … Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) to test whether a single man can win the White House (The Inquirer) … Disputed North Carolina race exposes mail ballot flaws (The Hill).

 

***

 

INVESTIGATIONS: Trump tweeted about the investigations around him eight times on Sunday, lashing out at his former attorney Michael Cohen as a “rat” and blasting prosecutors for not pursuing Democrats.

 

Cohen, who will report to prison in March, has been making the media rounds, casting his former boss as hopelessly corrupt and vowing to spill all of the president’s secrets. Democrats plan to haul Cohen before Congress for public testimony when they take over the House in January (Politico).

 

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The Hill: Trump’s legal problems worsen.

The Hill: Cohen fans the flames around Trump.

 

In addition to Cohen, several other former members of Trump’s inner circle are cooperating with prosecutors as investigations around the campaign, inaugural committee and the president’s business empire gain steam and captivate Washington.

 

Michael Flynn, the president’s former national security adviser, will be sentenced on Tuesday (The Hill).

 

The Associated Press: Where the investigations stand.

The Washington Post: Nearly every organization Trump has led is under investigation.

 

Perspectives and Analysis

 

George Conway: Trump’s claim that he didn’t violate campaign finance laws is weak and dangerous.

Jonathan Turley: No glory in James Comey getting away with abuse of power at FBI.

 

More from the investigations front … New Senate report on Russian disinformation shows operations scale and sweep (The Washington Post) … Special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe has cost $25 million so far (The Hill) … How congressional Democrats plan to investigate Trump (The New Yorker) …  Five things to know about the Trump inauguration investigation (The Hill).

 
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: The government is not fully funded and parts of it might shutter on Friday night. The president’s budget submission to Congress, to be released early in 2019, and usually wrapped up in draft form before Christmas, is still a work in progress. The White House chief of staff, John Kelly, is leaving the West Wing in a matter of days. And lots of seasoned observers in Washington expressed skepticism about Trump’s decision on Friday to name budget director Mick Mulvaney as the acting successor to Kelly while continuing to lead the Office of Management and Budget (The Hill).

 

No one is quite sure how long Mulvaney, an ambitious former congressman from South Carolina, will be “acting,” or how long Trump will ask him to wear multiple hats. But he is expected to deliver something the president prizes: loyalty (The Associated Press).

 

NBC News reports it was Mulvaney’s idea to be “acting” chief, a title he hopes to hold for just half a year — and one that would in any other White House be perceived as rendering him a lame duck before he begins.

 

Trump has experienced more turnover among top West Wing assistants to the president — that is, the roughly 25 senior advisory positions earning the highest salaries — than any previous president at this point in a term. Trump’s turnover is 73 percent, presidency scholar Martha Joynt Kumar, director of the White House Transition Project, told The Hill.

 

Simultaneous with the latest West Wing churn, the president purged Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke over the weekend because Zinke was mired in ethics probes, including an investigation at the Department of Justice, which could still dominate headlines when House Democratic overseers hold hearings in 2019.

 

Trump will sit down with the secretary in the Oval Office this afternoon.

 

Environmentalists pummeled Zinke on his way out the door. He will “go down as the most anti-conservation Interior secretary in our nation’s history,” Jennifer Rokala, executive director of the Center for Western Priorities, said (The Hill).

 

Interior’s top deputy, David Bernhardt, who is set to become acting secretary at the department, has been the man behind the curtain, suggesting Trump is not changing policies (Politico).

 

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Immigration: A 7-year-old migrant girl’s death in the custody of Customs and Border Protection continues to draw new scrutiny to the government’s treatment of migrants, especially at the southern border with Mexico (The Hill). Jakelin Caal’s death highlights communications barriers at the border. She was Guatemalan, and her father’s first language is a Mayan dialect (The Associated Press).

 

Trump on Sunday defended U.S. separations of immigrant parents and children at the border — a policy blocked in federal court — because he says the treatment discourages migrants from attempting to enter the United States.

 

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OPINION

The murder of The Weekly Standard, by John Podhoretz, Commentary Magazine. http://bit.ly/2PFnVCS

 

Expect a slowdown in economic growth in 2019, by Michael Hicks, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2QFhYv6

 
WHERE AND WHEN

The Senate convenes at 3 p.m. and resumes consideration of the House version of the criminal justice reform bill.

 

The House is in pro forma session today. The full House isn’t scheduled to convene until Wednesday.

 

Vice President Pence will see Trump over lunch, then meet with New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters in the Roosevelt Room. This evening, the vice president flies to Cape Canaveral, Fla., arriving before 10 p.m.

 

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets at 9 a.m. with New Zealand’s Peters.

 

The president meets with the vice president at midday. Trump and first lady Melania Trump host two Christmas receptions at the White House this evening.

 

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ELSEWHERE

> Tax law: Divorcing couples are racing to resolve their cases by the end of the year to dodge a change included in the 2017 tax law that eliminates the deduction for alimony payments for divorces concluded in 2019 and beyond (The Hill).

 

> North Korea: Pyongyang condemned the Trump administration on Sunday for stepping up sanctions, warning the United States of a return to “exchanges of fire” and arguing that North Korea’s disarmament could be blocked forever (Reuters).

 

> Syria: The United States is waging a hidden war in Syria, where U.S. troops will stay indefinitely while controlling a third of the country — with all the perils that accompany that presence (The Washington Post).

 

> Africa: The U.S. military carried out six airstrikes in Somalia over the weekend and killed 62 al-Shabab extremist rebels, the Pentagon said today (The Associated Press).

 

> Tech: Alphabet Inc’s Google said today that it will invest more than $1 billion to establish a new campus in New York, to be the primary location for Google’s global business organization. The company made the announcement in a blog post (Reuters).

 

> Sodden city: 2018 is officially Washington’s wettest calendar year on record (WTOP).

 

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THE CLOSER

And finally … 🎓 It’s graduation season around the country, and a few ceremonies made us smile over the weekend.

 

In case you missed it, Aldo Amenta graduated from Florida International University on Sunday, a considerable triumph after a diving accident in a swimming pool three years ago left him in a coma and with a broken neck. As a quadriplegic, Amenta, a native of Venezuela, usually relies on his wheelchair, but he walked across the stage Sunday to accept his diploma with help from an exoskeleton, some rehearsals and the exuberant support of his classmates (CBS News). Video is HERE.

 

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Another Midwestern ceremony went viral with a different kind of flourish. University of Missouri senior Massimo Montalbano, who completed his major in animal sciences, brought Amelia, a 3-year-old cow, to campus on Thursday for his graduation photo. The news media in Columbia, Mo., reported that his slow-moving prop was a hit with students and faculty (Fox Illinois and The Associated Press).

 

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And speaking of animals at graduations, Piedmont Virginia Community College and Service Dogs of Virginia held a special ceremony on Saturday to honor a new team of service dogs. The nonprofit organization based in Charlottesville, Va., raises, trains and places canines to assist people with disabilities (NBC29), and matched 10 clients with dogs this year.

 

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The Morning Report is created by journalists Jonathan Easley jeasley@thehill.com & Alexis Simendinger asimendinger@thehill.com. Suggestions? Tips? We want to hear from you! Share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!

 
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