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2018年5月11日 星期五

The Hill's Morning Report — Sponsored by FICO — Ryan’s rocky march into May | Immigration push in House | The Hill Exclusive: WH aide mocks ‘dying’ McCain | John Kelly: Trump ‘embarrassed’ by Russia probe | House developments on farm bill, foreign aid and prison reform | Senate nose-counting for CIA confirmation | Trump stumps in Indiana | Trump-Kim summit set for June 12 in Singapore | Pence: Time for Mueller probe to `wrap up’ | Merkel: Europe can’t count on U.S. | Trump blisters DHS secretary over borders | Doves find UK’s Salisbury Cathedral |

The Hill's Morning Report
Sponsored by FICO
Ryan’s rocky march into May | Immigration push in House | The Hill Exclusive: WH aide mocks ‘dying’ McCain | John Kelly: Trump ‘embarrassed’ by Russia probe | House developments on farm bill, foreign aid and prison reform | Senate nose-counting for CIA confirmation | Trump stumps in Indiana | Trump-Kim summit set for June 12 in Singapore | Pence: Time for Mueller probe to `wrap up’ | Merkel: Europe can’t count on U.S. | Trump blisters DHS secretary over borders | Doves find UK’s Salisbury Cathedral |
 

© Getty Images

 

 

Welcome to The Hill's Morning Report, and TGIF! This daily email, a successor to The Hill’s Tipsheet, is reported by Jonathan Easley and Alexis Simendinger to get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. (CLICK HERE to subscribe!) 

 

Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) is serving out the final months of his congressional career, but nobody said it was going to be easy.

  • Ryan’s conference is in revolt over immigration and trying to jam an immigration bill to to the floor for a vote against the Speaker’s wishes.
     
  • Ryan backed down after a bitter feud with the House chaplain he tried to force out.
     
  • The GOP’s spending bill was a disaster with the base and lawmakers are now working with the White House to claw some of it back.
     
  • Ryan has been forced to take sides in a bitter feud between House conservatives and the Justice Department over classified documents pertaining to the special counsel. Ryan is backing embattled House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) in the fight.
     
  • Republicans are unnerved about the possibility of losing the House after the November midterms. Ryan remains a fundraising juggernaut for the party, but he’d rather train his focus elsewhere.

 

Of these things, by far the most consequential policy issue facing the Speaker right now is a discharge petition backed by centrist Republicans trying to force a vote on an immigration bill.

 

The Hill’s Scott Wong reports that Ryan is warning his caucus that the discharge petition would effectively turn the floor over to Democrats, who are in the minority, and that President Trump would likely veto the bill if it ever got to his desk.

 

The Speaker says he’s committed to bringing an immigration bill to the floor before the midterm elections, but that might not be enough to keep vulnerable Republicans from districts with heavy Hispanic populations, such as Reps. Will Hurd (Texas), Carlos Curbelo (Fla.) and Jeff Denham (Calif.), at bay.

 

The Wall Street Journal: The discharge petition might help save the House majority.

 
fico

 

 
LEADING THE DAY

CONGRESS:  Farm bill: The Hill — The House expects to vote next week on a farm bill that includes a food stamps revamp.
 

Foreign aid: The HillLawmakers and the White House want to change the way the government assists and invests in struggling countries through foreign aid. Changes would consolidate several federal international development agencies. The effort is one of the few areas where Trump has sought to bolster, not slash, the federal government’s foreign aid system.
 

Prison reformThe Hill – A House committee this week approved a White House-backed prison reform plan that faces a cooler reception in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

 

>The Houston Chronicle: Jared Kushner tackles prison reform with Texas visit.

 

CIA nomination: The Hill — Senate nose counting is underway to assess whether Gina Haspel will be confirmed to lead the CIA following her Wednesday hearing. Haspel needs support from 50 senators and Republicans have only a slim 51-49 majority in the upper chamber. McCain and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) have already announced their opposition, but Haspel has picked up support from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.).

 

*** The Hill EXCLUSIVE ***

 

The fight over Haspel’s nomination took a nasty turn Thursday as the White House communications department met to strategize over McCain’s opposition. The Hill’s Jonathan Easley and Jordan Fabian were the first to report that special assistant Kelly Sadler told her colleagues, “It doesn’t matter, he’s dying anyway.”

 

Cindy McCain, the senator’s wife, tweeted her response:

© Screenshot/Twitter

 

Sadler called McCain’s daughter, Meghan McCain, to apologize.

 

>Politico: Former Vice President Dick Cheney says enhanced interrogation programs repudiated during the George W. Bush administration should continue, in contrast with Haspel’s testimony. 

 

Term limits: The Hill — House freshmen introduced legislation to impose congressional term limits, which requires a high hurdle of a constitutional amendment. Senators would be limited to serving two terms and representatives to serving six terms.

 

August recess: The Washington Post — A growing group of GOP senators want to cancel the chamber’s August recess in order to use the time to bring more nominations to the floor and tackle other must-pass priorities before the November elections.

 
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

CAMPAIGNS:  Campaign season is underway. Trump visited South Bend, Ind. last night to stump for GOP Senate candidate Mike Braun, who vanquished two sitting Republican lawmakers – Reps. Todd Rokita and Luke Messer – for the right to take on Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.) in November.
 

Donnelly is one of 10 Senate Democrats up for reelection in states Trump carried in 2016.

 

Where else will Trump campaign this cycle? He’s almost certain to make the trip to West Virginia, which he carried by 42 points in 2016. That’s bad news for Manchin, who is among the most vulnerable Democrats up for reelection.

 

Here are Manchin’s thoughts on the matter, courtesy WLJS.

 

I told the president, you don’t need to come back to West Virginia, it’s nice to have you but not during an election cycle.”
 

In his primary victory speech, Republican candidate Patrick Morissey pleaded with Trump to come as much as possible.

 

“You’ve been to this state now four times. I’d like you to come back as many times as you can between now and November.”

 

And the president might not be the only Trump to visit. Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. will hit the campaign trail soon and West Virginia is likely to be his first stop. Trump Jr. is staffing up ahead of the push, adding veteran GOP operative Andy Surabian to his team (The Hill).

 

Dan Balz: Midwestern voters gave Trump a chance. Now they’re the key to his political future.
 

The Hill: Progressive groups endorse Dems in two key races.

 

The Hill: Americans are upbeat about the economy but that isn’t translating into support for the tax bill.
 

The Hill: Republicans are having a hard time attracting interest from cities that might want to host their 2020 convention.

 

INVESTIGATIONS:

 

“What I think is that it’s been about a year since this investigation began. Our administration has provided over a million documents, we’ve fully cooperated in it and in the interest of the country, I think it’s time to wrap it up."Vice President Pence on NBC’s “Today” show.

 

The special counsel investigation turns one year-old on Thursday.

 

Separate from the special counsel’s Russia probe, there have been a cascade of stories in recent days about Trump’s personal attorney Michael Cohen, whose business dealings are under investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.

 

Cohen appears to have amassed a broad portfolio of corporate clients who paid him handsomely under the expectation that he could provide access to the president. Essentially, he was acting as an independent lobbyist.

 

Cohen denies any wrongdoing. And in an exclusive interview with The Hill’s Niall Stanage, Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani said the media needs to “calm down” and that the story does not involve the president or the White House.

 

The Hill: Watchdog group asks DOJ to probe Cohen dealings.

 

The Los Angeles Times: Michael Cohen turned his access to Trump into big money -- now big trouble.
 

That story overshadowed an escalating drama on Capitol Hill, where conservative lawmakers are locked in a fight with the Justice Department over classified documents pertaining to the special counsel.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Nunes and committee member Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) said they had a “productive conversation” with senior law enforcement officials about the documents divide on Thursday.
 

The Hill: Ryan backs Nunes in latest pursuit of DOJ documents.
 

The Wall Street Journal: The FBI was spying on the Trump campaign.
 

The Hill (op-ed): Demand for Mueller’s “scope” memo threatens principles of proper oversight.

 

INTERNATIONAL:  North Korea: The president announced via Twitter that his historic summit meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un will take place in Singapore on June 12.
 

The Hill: Why Singapore is the right spot for Trump-Kim summit.
 

The Hill: More than three-quarters of Americans approve of the meeting.
 

The Hill: Democrats want to hold Trump to the goal he set of verifiable denuclearization of North Korea.
 

The Hill: The president rebukes Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) over his criticism of Trump’s decision to exit the Iran nuclear agreement.

 

Iran: The Wall Street Journal: U.S. took a step toward cutting Iran off from the global economy, levying sanctions on a financing network.
 

Reuters: Oil prices near multi-year highs as Iran sanctions tighten supply outlook.  
 

Europe: The Hill German Chancellor Angela Merkel told an audience Thursday that Europe can no longer count on the United States to protect it, urging the continent to “take destiny into its own hands.”
 

>Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said Europe’s opposition and “posturing” following Trump’s decision to reimpose sanctions on Iran was a reflection of European nations’ business ties to Tehran (The Hill).
 

Israel: The HillWhite House condemns the “Iranian regime’s provocation against Israel.”
 

The New York Times: Israel and Iran engage in a shadow war in Syria.
 

The New York Times: Why Israel and Iran are clashing in Syria.
 

The Associated Press: United Nations chief calls for halt to “all hostile acts” in Middle East.
 

Islamic State: The New York TimesFive senior Islamic State in Iraq and Syria officials were captured, including a top aide to the group’s leader, in a complex cross-border sting carried out by Iraqi and American intelligence, two Iraqi officials said Wednesday.

 

The president tweeted about the sting on Thursday.

© Screenshot/Twitter

 

New York Times foreign correspondent Rukmini Callimachi says the ISIS arrests occurred in February:

© Screenshot/Twitter

 

CABINET & WHITE HOUSE:  Homeland Security Department: The New York Times — Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen considered quitting after Trump suggested during a Wednesday Cabinet meeting that she failed to make U.S. borders secure. In a statement Thursday about the blowup, Nielsen said the president was “rightly frustrated” with existing immigration laws.

 

Treasury Department:  The Hill – The nomination of Adam Lerrick, tapped for deputy undersecretary of the Treasury Department for international finance, was withdrawn. Lerrick is expected to become a senior adviser to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, according to NBC News.

 

Veterans Administration: The Associated Press — Trump considers Army veteran Rep. Brian Mast, 37, of Florida among potential nominees to lead the troubled department.

 

White House:
 

*** New today...White House chief of staff John Kelly speaks with NPR’s “Morning Edition”...says Trump is “embarrassed” by Russia probe...claims he has never considered leaving the White House despite “times of great frustration.”

 

Drug pricing:  The Hill – The president today will speak about lowering the costs of pharmaceuticals, but he won’t call for negotiating drug prices in Medicare.

 

National Security Council: National security adviser John Bolton continues to remake the NSC staff to his liking.
 

HuffPost: Rear Adm. Tim Ziemer, the head of global health security, departed on Tuesday. As it happened, cases of Ebola emerged in the Congo this week, with one casualty reported.
 

Politico: Bolton is pushing to eliminate White House cyber security position.

 
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OPINION

America’s broken bail system substitutes cash for justice and leaves the poor behind bars, by Malika Saada Saar and Mark Holden, The Daily Beast https://thebea.st/2rB0Yqf

 

Trump hasn’t earned a Nobel, but the Peshmerga have, by A.J. Caschetta, opinion contributor to The Hill  https://bit.ly/2ryZ3TQ

 
WHERE AND WHEN

The House and Senate return to work late Monday.

 

The president hosts a roundtable with chief executive officers of auto companies, and outlines the administration’s ideas to lower drug prices.

 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports U.S. import and export price indexes for April.

 
ELSEWHERE

> Five veterans explain what they’re looking for in a Veterans Affairs Department secretary, by Jenna Johnson (The Washington Post). 

 

> The new shape of protest music, by Jason Parham (Wired).

 

> Glenda Jackson: This Tony nominee and former politician has a lot to say about being a woman right now (Q&A), by Laura Regensdorf (Vogue).

 
THE CLOSER

Multimedia artist Michael Pendry yesterday installed a breathtaking vision of peace inside Salisbury Cathedral in England, creating a flock of more than 2,500 white origami doves in the nave, reflected from below. Salisbury is still recovering from the nerve agent attack there in March. Pendry wants his work, called “Les Colombes” (the doves), to carry visitors’ messages folded inside each bird. It will be exhibited through July 22 (BBC News).

 

In their unity they stand for a fundamental human right to peace and freedom, the artist said.

 

© Getty Images

 

👏👏👏 ... The Morning Report Quiz winners this week are: Don Thompson, Joan McInerney, Mary Vita P. Treano, Javier Valle, Robert G. Taylor, John Rao, Marriott Clark,, and William Rickett, plus a terrific (and expert) response from Robert M. Edsel, Monuments Men Foundation founder and chairman. They knew that in 1967, the then-stunning price tag paid for a Leonardo da Vinci portrait now in the National Gallery of Art collection in Washington was $5 million. Thanks for reading and responding!

 

And finally … It’s May 11. Don’t forget to salute mothers on Sunday. Still time to plan!

 

****

 

Suggestions? Tips? Intriguing pix to share from around D.C. and the Capitol? We want to hear from you, and please encourage friends and colleagues to SUBSCRIBE! Jonathan Easley jeasley@thehill.com + Alexis Simendinger asimendinger@thehill.com

 
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DAILY DOSE: Multiple Reflections

Chabad.org
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Multiple Reflections

By Tzvi Freeman

Go out on a clear night and see the moon reflected in the water of a lake. Then see the very same moon reflected in a pond, in a teacup, in a single drop of water.

So the same essential truth is reflected within each person who studies Torah, from a small child who knows only the story to a great sage who plumbs its inner secrets.



By Tzvi Freeman


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2018年5月10日 星期四

Overnight Defense: House panel passes $716B defense bill | What's in the bill and what didn't make the cut | Pentagon details 'failures' in Niger operation | Trump, Kim meeting set

 
 
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THE TOPLINE: The House Armed Services Committee early Thursday morning easily passed its $716 billion defense policy bill for fiscal 2019.

The committee's version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) passed, 60-1, after more than 14 hours of debate. It now moves to the full House for a vote later this month.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) was the only "no" vote, and Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) was not present.

The committee considered about 400 amendments before the final vote, with debates largely centered around policy issues. Congress had already agreed on the final authorized topline amount as part of a two-year budget deal earlier this year.

 

What made it in: The bill would authorize nearly 16,000 additional active-duty troops across the military, provide a 2.6 percent pay raise for them -- the highest such raise in nine years -- and authorize almost $40 billion for aviation upgrades and more than $25 billion for equipment maintenance.

It would also authorize two more Virginia-class submarines and littoral combat ships, 77 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters and the upgrade of thousands of vehicles.

The Fourth Estate: Thornberry originally planned to add reforms aimed at cutting the Pentagon's defense agencies' budget by more than $25 billion by 2021.

The plan, which included closing seven of the 28 agencies not directly under military services, was pulled back slightly after pushback from Democrats and the Pentagon, leaving cuts up to the Pentagon's chief management officer.

Still, Rep. Anthony Brown (D-Md.) introduced an amendment to attempt to save the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) from elimination.

"It remains unclear what would happen to DISA's missions and functions," Brown argued of a potential shuttering, instead proposing a Pentagon report to look at the matter before any consolidation. His amendment was defeated along party lines.

But Thornberry's plan to cut the Test Resource Management Center was voted down.

Aviation accidents: The committee endorsed an amendment offered by committee ranking member Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) to establish an independent commission to study military aviation safety. The proposal comes after a series of deadly military aircraft incidents, including a C-130 cargo plane crash last week that killed all nine on board.

Space force: Among the amendments that were rejected was a proposal offered by Rep. Michael Turner (R-Ohio), that would have slowed plans for President Trump's desired Space Force. It was defeated unanimously.

Trump administration travel: An amendment that would have required the Pentagon to report on the cost of Trump administration officials using military aircraft for travel was narrowly defeated, 30-31.

Other failed amendments: A provision to limit Trump's planned Veterans Day military parade to only ceremonial units and equipment; a proposal to limit the role of National Guard troops ordered to the U.S.-Mexico border by Trump; and one to prevent Department of Defense funds from going to building a border wall.

In addition, Republicans shot down Smith's amendment to remove low-yield nuclear weapons from the bill, 28-33.

 

PENTAGON WON'T SEEK DISCIPLINARY ACTION OVER NIGER: Multiple "individual, organizational, and institutional failures" were to blame for the deaths of four U.S. soldiers last year in Niger, but no disciplinary action is being recommended for those involved, Pentagon officials said Thursday.

Insufficient training and preparation, command mistakes, lack of attention to detail and an outnumbered force taken by surprise in an attack all contributed to the loss of the soldiers, according to an eight-page report summarizing an internal investigation.

U.S. Africa Command (Africom) head Marine Corps Gen. Thomas Waldhauser said changes have already been made in his command, Special Operations Command and the Army at large to improve troop safety and preparation in Africa.

"I take ownership of all the events connected to the ambush of 4 October," Waldhauser told reporters at the Pentagon. "Again, the responsibility is mine."

 

What exactly happened: The Oct. 4 battle between U.S. and Nigerien forces and three times as many enemy combatants came after the group left Camp Ouallam in Niger on Oct. 3 to hunt for a high-ranking Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militant linked to the kidnapping of a U.S. aid worker, the military said.

Leaders of the team had submitted a different mission to higher command for approval, according to the report.

When the ISIS militant was not found, troops were ultimately redirected to a mission to gather intelligence on the militant, which they completed before stopping near the village of Tongo Tongo to get water. The group then conducted an impromptu meeting with village leaders and were ambushed after leaving.

The four U.S. troops killed in action "sustained wounds that were either immediately fatal or rapidly fatal," and were not captured alive by the enemy, according to the report.

What will come next: Defense Secretary James Mattis has directed Waldhauser to complete in four months a review of shortfalls in training, procedures and planning. 

Waldhauser added that in the meantime, "we are now far more prudent in our missions." 

"We've increased the firepower, we've increased the [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] capacity, we've increased various response times," he said. "We have beefed up a lot of things, posture wise." 

No punishments yet: Waldhauser also said the findings "call out individuals for certain activities," but Special Ops "will have the responsibility for taking appropriate action to ensure accountability." 

"We don't recommend punishment, we recommend appropriate action," he said. 

 

HASPEL WATCH: Republican senators offered deference to GOP Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) on Thursday but gave few signs that his opposition to CIA nominee Gina Haspel would sink her nomination

McCain was captured and tortured during the Vietnam War and has long been an outspoken opponent of the harsh interrogation techniques used during the George W. Bush administration. 

Haspel, a veteran of the spy agency, was involved in the interrogations program, helping prompt McCain's opposition to her nomination.  

He became the second GOP senator to oppose Haspel, saying her "refusal to acknowledge torture's immorality is disqualifying."

McCain remains in Arizona battling brain cancer, leaving him unable to buttonhole and lobby his colleagues against Haspel's nomination in person. 

 

Other senators reveal their voting plans: Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said Thursday that she will vote against Haspel.

"This nomination is bigger than one person. The torture program was illegal at the time based on international treaties. ... I believe those who were intimately involved should not lead the agency," Feinstein said in a statement. 

She added that the "CIA's Rendition, Detention and Interrogation Program is one of the darkest chapters in our nation's history and it must not be repeated." 

Haspel a day earlier was grilled by the Senate Intelligence Committee on her background in the agency controversial post-9/11 interrogation program.

White House official 'mocked' dying McCain: A White House official mocked Sen. John McCain's brain cancer diagnosis at an internal meeting on Thursday. Special assistant Kelly Sadler made the derisive comments during a closed-door meeting of about two-dozen communications staffers.

"It doesn't matter, he's dying anyway," Sadler said, according to a source familiar with the remarks at the meeting.

The White House did not deny the account of Sadler's remarks, which came amid a discussion of Haspel's nomination and McCain's opposition to it. The Hill's Jordan Fabian and Jonathan Easley were the first with the story.

 

TRUMP-KIM MEETING SET FOR JUNE IN SINGAPORE: President Trump announced Thursday his high-stakes summit meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will take place on June 12 in Singapore.

"The highly anticipated meeting between Kim Jong Un and myself will take place in Singapore on June 12th," he tweeted. "We will both try to make it a very special moment for World Peace!" 

The announcement capped off weeks of negotiations over the date and location for the talks that began in early March, when the president said he would accept Kim's invitation to meet. 

 

Trump greets freed detainees: Trump revealed the details of the meeting after North Korea released three American detainees who were imprisoned there on charges that were widely viewed as politically motivated. 

On Thursday morning he greeted the freed prisoners, Kim Dong-chul, Tony Kim and Kim Hak-song. The three were escorted back to the U.S. by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, arriving at Andrews Air Force Base outside of Washington, D.C., at 2:42 a.m. Thursday.

"The fact we were able to get them out so soon was a tribute to a lot of things," Trump said to a crowd of journalists. "I just want to say, this is a special night."

Dems say scrapped Iran deal sets new bar for N. Korea talks: Democrats say Trump's decision to scrap the Iran nuclear deal sets a high bar for ensuring denuclearization -- a standard they plan to hold him to ahead of his planned talks with Kim.

"By declaring that the extensive enforcement provisions against Iran are grossly deficient, in what he described as 'the worst deal ever,' Trump sets the standard by which he himself should be judged in Korea," Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas).

"We cannot settle for some broad statement of principles," he continued. "We need to know that he will secure a more stringent inspection regime in Korea -- even more intrusive than that which he has unjustifiably condemned in Iran."

  

ON TAP FOR TOMORROW

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-Texas) will speak at the Council on Foreign Relations at 12:45 p.m. in Washington 

 

ICYMI

-- The Hill: Pentagon warns against offshore drilling in eastern Gulf of Mexico

-- The Hill: Five senior ISIS officials captured in US-Iraqi operation

-- The Hill: House votes to advance Yucca Mountain nuclear waste project

-- The Hill: Kaine: Pentagon removes numerous climate change references from Obama-era report

-- The Hill: Bolton considering eliminating top cybersecurity job: report

-- The Hill: White House condemns 'Iranian regime provocation against Israel'

--The Associated Press: Trump is considering this Army veteran and member of Congress for VA secretary

 
 

Please send tips and comments to Rebecca Kheel, rkheel@thehill.com, and Ellen Mitchell, emitchell@thehill.com.

Follow us on Twitter: @thehill@Rebecca_H_K@EllenMitchell23

 
 
 
 
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Overnight Energy: House votes to advance Yucca Mountain nuke waste plan | EPA retains danger findings for paint stripping chemical | County sues oil companies over climate

 
 
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HOUSE VOTES TO ADVANCE YUCCA NUCLEAR SITE: The House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to pass a bill that seeks to move forward a process toward building the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste facility.

The Nuclear Waste Policy Amendments Act, sponsored by Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.), passed 340 to 72.

It would set a path forward for the Department of Energy (DOE) to resume planning for and building the southern Nevada site, transfer land to the DOE for it, ease the federal funding mechanism and allow DOE to build or license a temporary site to store waste while the Yucca project is being planned and built.

"The bill we're considering today reinforces a promise that the United States Congress, on behalf of the entire federal government, made to our constituents a generation ago. Today, we're keeping that promise," Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said on the House floor.

"We will accept responsibility for, and properly dispose of, radioactive waste. This is long overdue."

The bill received widespread support. Many lawmakers justified their votes by arguing that spent nuclear fuel stored at operating or closed power plants in their districts ought to instead be at a centrally-located facility designed for long-term storage.

"Regardless of your position on nuclear energy, we have to acknowledge the reality that tens of thousands of tons of waste already exist," said Rep. Paul Tonko (N.Y.), the top Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Environment.

Why it matters: Congress already decided, in 1987, that Yucca would be the nation's sole disposal site for high-level nuclear waste from energy and weapons activities.

But the bill passed Thursday would allow a series of steps to move that process along and potentially get the facility operating in the foreseeable future.

It also serves as an important sign of Congress's strong support for the project, despite the fact that the bill isn't a direct referendum on it.

What's next: The bill is likely not moving anywhere in the Senate anytime soon. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) declared Thursday that it is "dead on arrival."

In addition, Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) is running for reelection in what is likely to be one of the Senate's closest races this year. He opposes Yucca, but forcing him to vote on the bill is not likely to help his chances.

But the Senate, like the House, has many lawmakers worried about the nuclear waste sitting in their states, and they want it taken out and put somewhere here safer. So the bill may have a chance in another year.

Read more here.

 

EPA TO UPHOLD OBAMA-ERA DETERMINATION ON DANGEROUS CHEMICAL: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said Thursday that it won't reverse an Obama administration report that enumerated various harms from exposure to paint-stripping chemical methylene chloride.

In a Thursday morning statement, the EPA stopped short of saying whether it will ban the chemical or certain uses of it.

But the announcement that the EPA "is not re-evaluating the paint stripping uses of methylene chloride and is relying on its previous risk assessments" is a welcome sign for environmental and health advocates who had suspected that the Trump administration would go soft on the substance.

The EPA also announced that it plans to continue the regulatory process for methylene chloride started under former President Obama in 2016 and will send it to the White House Office of Management and Budget for final review "shortly."

The announcement came days after EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt met personally with Wendy Hartley and Cindy Wynne, whose sons are among the dozens of people who have died from exposure to the solvent.

Hartley and Wynne said they were glad Pruitt agreed to meet with them, but disappointed that he did not make any commitments at the Monday meeting.

In the EPA's semiannual regulatory agenda released in December, it did not commit to a timeline on a regulation for methylene chloride. Advocates took that as a sign that Pruitt wanted to abandon the effort.

Why it matters: Methylene chloride's uses include stripping paint, degreasing and certain food production techniques. If inhaled, it can cause symptoms ranging from dizziness, nausea and headaches to suffocation, coma and death. The Obama administration previously suggested banning the chemical based on a risk assessment but the Trump administration previously avoided committing to a ban. While this announcement doesn't confirm a ban will happen, advocates are cautiously optimistic.

 

ANOTHER COUNTY SUES OIL INDUSTRY OVER CLIMATE CHANGE: A Washington state county filed a lawsuit against the oil and gas industry Thursday for contributing to climate change.

King County's suit is targeting five fossil fuel companies -- BP, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch and ConocoPhillips -- "for knowingly contributing to climate disruptions and putting the residents of King County at greater risk of floods, landslides, ocean acidification, sea level rise, and other impacts," according to a county statement.

The county, which encompasses Seattle, aims to require those companies to establish an abatement fund to mitigate the effects of climate change on salmon recovery, public health, storm water management and infrastructure.

"The science is undisputable [sic]: climate change is impacting our region today, and it will only cause greater havoc and hardships in the future," King County Executive Dow Constantine said in a statement.

"The companies that profited the most from fossil fuels should help bear the costs of managing these disasters. Big Oil spent many decades disregarding and dismissing what is our most pressing generational challenge. We must hold these companies accountable as we marshal our resources to protect and preserve what makes this region great."

Read more here.

 

OUTSIDE THE BELTWAY:

Idaho officials have approved a limited grizzly bear hunting season, the first in four decades, the Idaho Statesman reports.

Hazardous chemicals spilled into a river near California's Lake Tahoe, closing highways and forcing evacuations, The Lake Tahoe New reports.

The United Kingdom is planning a new watchdog commission to protect the environment, intended to replace the European Union's systems after Brexit is complete, the Guardian reports.

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:

Check out Thursday's stories ...

-Pentagon warns against offshore drilling in eastern Gulf of Mexico

-Trump officials kill NASA project monitoring greenhouse gas emissions

-Washington county files lawsuit against oil and gas industry over climate change

-EPA won't reverse findings of danger from paint stripping chemical

-House votes to advance Yucca Mountain nuclear waste project

-Pentagon removes numerous climate change references from Obama-era report

 
 

Please send tips and comments to Timothy Cama, tcama@thehill.com; and Miranda Green, mgreen@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @Timothy_Cama@mirandacgreen@thehill

 
 
 
 
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