Kari Lake declines to concede, says she's assembling legal team

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Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) declined to concede governor race to Democrat Katie Hobbs Thursday, raising concerns about the election process.

The Associated Press and other outlets projected that Hobbs won the race on Monday. But Lake indicated she is assembling a legal team that is “collecting evidence and data” pertaining to the electoral process.

“Rest assured, I have assembled the best and brightest legal team and we are exploring every avenue to correct the many wrongs that have been done this past week,” Lake said in a video address posted Thursday morning. “I’m doing everything in my power to right these wrongs.”

On multiple occasions, Lake, a Trump-backed candidate, sidestepped questions about whether she would accept the results of her election.

Since Election Day, Lake has called election officials “incompetent,” and shortly after Hobbs was projected as the winner, Lake tweeted: “Arizonans know BS when they see it.”

Lake on Thursday pointed to printing malfunctions in Maricopa County, the state’s most populous county that includes Phoenix, calling it “unforgivable” and claiming voters were disenfranchised.

Seventy of the county’s 223 voting centers early on Election Day used printers that churned out ballots with ink that was too light for tabulation machines to read, election officials said.

Voters could wait in line until the issue was fixed, cast a ballot at another vote center or deposit their original ballot in a separate, secure box that was sent to the county’s central facility for tabulation. 

County election officials have repeatedly pushed back on Lake’s allegations, saying no one was denied an opportunity to vote and indicated the issue impacted less than 7 percent of Election Day ballots. 

The Lake campaign and Republican groups called for an extension of in-person voting on Election Day in the county just before polls closed, but a state judge rejected the motion, saying he had seen no evidence that a voter was unable to cast a ballot.

“The good news is election administration has built in redundancies — backup plans when things don’t go as planned,” Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chair Bill Gates (D) and Vice Chairman Clint Hickman (R) said in a joint statement last week.

“This enables all valid votes to count even if technology, on occasion, fails,” the statement continued. “Voters impacted by the printer issue had several ways to cast their ballot yesterday, including dropping their completed ballot into a secure box (door 3) on site. Those ballots will be verified as legitimate and then tabulated.”

Some of Lake’s claims were also endorsed by former President Trump, who formally entered the 2024 presidential contest on Tuesday. Lake endorsed Trump in the race.

Lake on Thursday also attacked Hobbs, who serves as Arizona’s secretary of state, for declining to recuse herself from this year’s election proceedings. 

Hobbs’s office oversees the certification of elections, while counties handle ballots and submit their tabulations to the office. 

Allie Bones, Hobbs’s deputy, told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Monday that the office will never touch ballots from the election.

But Bones added that Hobbs will fulfill a “ministerial act” of signing paperwork signing off on the statewide canvass alongside the signatures of the state’s Republican governor and attorney general.

Source: TEST FEED1

Warnock: Walker ‘crossed a line’ with attacks against family

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U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) said GOP candidate Herschel Walker has “crossed a line” after Walker accused the Democrat of being a negligent father.

“I know that politics is ugly,” Warnock, the father of two, said in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “People play all kinds of games, unfortunately. But Herschel Walker and his allies have crossed a line where my family is concerned.”

“I want to set the record straight: My children live with me. I am present with my children in every way that a father should be, from breakfast in the morning to bedtime prayers at night. I can’t continue to let him lie about our family.” 

At a campaign stop in Augusta earlier this week, Walker said Warnock doesn’t “keep his own kids.”

“He paid himself for child care, all that stuff – why don’t he keep his own kids?” Walker said. “Don’t have nobody keep your kids. … I keep my own even though he lied about me.”

Walker’s campaign told AJC that Warnock’s family is “fair game” since “he and his allies have no problem with Hershel’s family being attacked.”

Walker’s campaign has been steeped in controversies surrounding his own parenting after it revealed Walker had three additional children he had not publicly acknowledged and, later, his son, 22-year-old Christian Walker, heavily criticized his father. He has also been accused of paying for multiple abortions. 

Warnock is currently in a custody battle with his ex-wife, Oulèye Ndoye, who has accused the pastor of neglecting to see his children during his custody days and leaving her with unpaid child care expenses. 

Earlier this year, Ndoye filed for additional custody of their children so she could move them to Massachusetts as she completes a Harvard University program. 

The filing also asked for an increase in Warnock’s child support payments due to his “substantial” increase in income after his 2020 runoff victory. 

“My children are the two brightest stars in my universe – my reason for just about everything I do,” Warnock told AJC. “They are in my care. And they lack for nothing.”

Walker and Warnock are embroiled in a highly watched runoff after neither candidate secured 50 percent of the vote on Nov. 8. The two will face each other again on Dec. 6.

Source: TEST FEED1

Paul to serve as top Republican on Senate oversight committee 

Sen. Rand Paul (Ky.) announced Thursday that he will take over as the top Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee next year, opting not to become the ranking member on the Senate Health Committee, where he also serves as a senior member.  

The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee is the Senate’s chief oversight committee, which will give Paul broad jurisdiction over federal departments and agencies. 

Had Republicans won the Senate majority in last week’s elections, Paul could have spearheaded Senate investigations of the Biden administration. 

The committee has authority to receive referrals on all legislation related to the national archives, the census, the federal civil service, the organization of the executive branch and the U.S. Postal Service.  

“The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s mission of oversight and investigations is critical to Congress reasserting itself, and as ranking member, I look forward to continuing the storied history of this committee’s leadership in consequential bipartisan oversight and investigations,” Paul said in a statement.  

“Given the committee’s duty to conduct oversight over the entire government, I remain hopeful that we will pursue a robust and bipartisan investigation into the origins of COVID,” he said.  

When Paul won reelection to a third term last week, he told supporters: “When I return to the Senate, as chairman, I promise you this: The COVID cover-up will end. I will subpoena every last document of Dr. Fauci.”

“Congress has not held one hearing to investigate the origins of COVID,” he declared.

As a member of the Senate Health Committee, Paul clashed regularly with Anthony Fauci, the chief medical adviser to the president who became the face of the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Fauci told The Hill this week that he wasn’t worried about the prospect of heightened scrutiny if Republicans won control of the Senate. 

“I have nothing to hide at all, despite the accusations that I’m hiding something,” he said.  

Senate Republicans had thought that they would win the Senate majority, but those dreams were dashed after Democrat John Fetterman won an open Senate seat in Pennsylvania and Sens. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) won tough reelection races.  

Paul will have less latitude to issue subpoenas as a member of the minority.  

Fauci, who has served as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for nearly 40 years, plans to retire from the federal government next month.  

Source: TEST FEED1

Watch live: Pelosi to give speech from House floor amid questions about future

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is slated to speak from the House floor on Thursday.

The event is scheduled to begin at 9:45 a.m. ET.

Watch the video above.

Source: TEST FEED1

Pelosi to 'address her future' amid questions on whether she'll stay as Democrats' leader

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Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) will “address her future plans” on Thursday, a top aide said shortly after news broke that Republicans will control the House of Representatives next year.

“@SpeakerPelosi has been overwhelmed by calls from colleagues, friends and supporters. This evening, the Speaker monitored returns in the three remaining critical states,” Pelosi’s deputy chief of staff, Drew Hammill, wrote in a tweet late Wednesday.

“The Speaker plans to address her future plans tomorrow to her colleagues,” Hammill added. “Stay tuned.”

A source told The Hill that Pelosi brought two versions of her speech home with her Wednesday night.

Republicans were projected to regain majority control of the House for the first time since 2018 after The Associated Press called a race in California for incumbent Rep. Mike Garcia (R), giving the GOP a 218th seat in the lower chamber.

Pelosi, 82, has been notably mum on her plans, deflecting questions about where the longtime Democratic leader sees herself in the caucus during the next Congress.

During an interview with ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, she said she was not commenting “until this election is finished,” but told CNN’s “State of the Union” that her decision would “of course” come before Democrats are scheduled to hold leadership elections at the end of the month.

The Speaker has not, however, hinted at what that decision includes.

Pelosi made a promise to a group of her colleagues in 2018 that this year would be the last atop the Democratic caucus, but the party’s unexpectedly strong showing in House races last week has raised questions about whether or not the Speaker, who became the first woman to hold the gavel, will follow through with her four-year-old pledge.

She told CNN’s Anderson Cooper in an interview last week that her choice would “be affected” by the violent attack on her husband, Paul, at their San Francisco home late last month.

“I have to say my decision will be affected about what happened the last week or two,” Pelosi told Cooper just more than one week after the attack.

Pressed on if her decision would be influenced by the assault, Pelosi said “yes.”

That statement, however, has left many wondering just how the brutal incident will affect her decision: will she leave her spot in leadership — or Congress altogether — to spend more time with her husband, or remain atop the caucus to show that political violence cannot put an end to her historic time in the Capitol?

If Pelosi does bow out of House Democratic leadership, it would spark a seismic shakeup for the caucus and usher in a new slate of younger leaders who have been waiting in the wings for an opening. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) is a favorite among many to succeed Pelosi if she steps down.

Attention would also shift to House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) and House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.), with many wondering if Pelosi’s second- and third-in-command would follow her lead and bow out of leadership.

–Updated at 8:20 a.m.

Source: TEST FEED1

The Hill's Morning Report — GOP (finally) wins the House

Editor’s note: The Hill’s Morning Report is our daily newsletter that dives deep into Washington’s agenda. To subscribe, click here or fill out the box below.

More than a week after Election Day, the Republican Party has officially regained control of the House of Representatives. The Associated Press called the GOP’s key 218th seat Wednesday evening, ensuring control of the chamber. 

The GOP had long anticipated winning control of the House in the 2022 elections, as midterms have historically benefited the party not in control of the White House. But losses in key districts that came into focus on election night put a damper on GOP spirits, turning the projected red wave Republicans had been teasing for months into something closer to a ripple (The Hill).

“No one ever said this thing was going to be easy. I always said that all I could guarantee was that we’re going to win the majority,” National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Emmer (Minn.) told reporters last week. “How wide and how deep the majority was going to be was totally up to the voters.”

The Hill: House Democrats assess a transformed Washington after losing the majority.

The House win comes as the GOP faced more internal post-midterm tests on Wednesday when Senators gathered for leadership elections and the party grappled with former President Trump once again mounting a presidential campaign. Republicans are facing internal discord after they secured a narrow House majority but failed to flip the Senate, leading members to question whether the party is in need of a leadership overhaul. 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Wednesday fended off the most serious threat to his position to date when he defeated National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Rick Scott (Fla.) in the GOP leadership vote, writes The Hill’s Alexander Bolton

Now McConnell has the tough task of healing the fractures in his caucus exposed during an acrimonious meeting Tuesday. McConnell also faces the continued threat to his leadership posed by Trump, who fueled Scott’s challenge by repeatedly calling for McConnell’s ouster.

The Washington Post: Republican infighting roils Congress as midterms fallout continues.

Roll Call: McConnell prevails in Senate GOP leadership contest.

Two years after rallying behind Trump as the GOP’s uncontested champion, Republicans on Capitol Hill are sounding a very different tune as Trump seeks the White House once again in 2024, write The Hill’s Mike Lillis and Mychael Schnell. While a number of his staunchest supporters have endorsed the former president, a long list of others expressed an openness to back an alternative candidate, said it’s too early to endorse anyone, or just wanted to avoid the topic altogether. 

The lukewarm response to Trump’s announcement could provide a key opening for other Republicans still on the fence about whether to challenge him in 2024, writes The Hill’s Max Greenwood. The former president’s seemingly weakened position in the GOP, which could open the door even wider to a hard-charging Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), riding high on his midterm win and with the wind at his back — as well as to other would-be challengers.

Trump has launched his third presidential campaign at a moment of political and legal vulnerability, writes The Hill’s Niall Stanage. The midterm elections have tarnished his brand, it’s plausible he gets indicted related to the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago, and DeSantis is a rising rival. The GOP’s internal debate over Trump is also permeating debates about Republican congressional leadership — making for a fractured party that the former president might struggle to pull together behind him.

Axios: Donor Stephen Schwarzman comes out against Trump in major defection.

The Washington Post: Ivanka Trump says she won’t be part of her father’s campaign.

Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) is eyeing legislation that would bar Trump from serving in office under the 14th Amendment “for leading an insurrection against the United States.”

Cicilline, who served as an impeachment manager during the former president’s first impeachment, on Tuesday sent a letter to his Democratic colleagues previewing the bill and soliciting co-sponsors for the measure. It’s unclear when he would introduce the legislation (The Hill).

Trump’s 2024 White House bid puts a spotlight on President Biden, who has not yet officially announced he will seek another term and has kept a comfortable distance from reacting to Trump while in office, The Hill’s Alex Gangitano and Brett Samuels report. The president has indicated he has no intention of getting into a mud-slinging contest with his predecessor or giving him oxygen as he tries to mount a comeback. But the White House and Democratic National Committee have signaled they are prepared to defend Biden’s record and remind the country of Trump’s, leaving Biden to do the work of being president in the meantime. 

The New York Times: Trump is running in 2024. The White House has a plan.

Georgia’s Senate race runoff is three weeks away and Democrats are hoping big names like former President Obama could help put incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock over the top against GOP candidate Hershel Walker (The Hill).

Warnock on Tuesday joined a lawsuit that seeks to overturn a rule limiting Saturday early voting in the runoff election (The New York Times). 

Politico: GOP civil war spreads to Georgia runoff.

Vox: The GOP had terrible Senate candidates and it really did sink them.


Related Articles

NBC News: Michael Flynn ordered to testify in Trump election interference probe.

Vox: Where Trump and DeSantis actually disagree.

Politico: Networks limit Trump’s airtime during 2024 announcement.

FiveThirtyEight: A historic number of women will be governors next year. 

The New York Times: In Arizona, Kari Lake’s next move splits factions of the GOP.


LEADING THE DAY

CONGRESS

The Senate on Wednesday voted to start debate on legislation that would codify same-sex marriage protections, paving the way for the bill to pass by the end of the week. Senators voted 62-37 to advance the measure, with every Democrat joined by 12 Republicans. The chamber is expected to vote again today to invoke cloture, setting up a final vote by the end of the week.

“This legislation unites Americans,” Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), the lone openly lesbian senator, said on the Senate floor before the vote. “With the Respect For Marriage Act, we can ease the fear for millions of same-sex and interracial couples have that their freedoms and their rights could be stripped away… And this will give millions of loving couples the certainty, the dignity and the respect that they need and that they deserve.”

A vote on the original bill in late September was postponed until after the midterms because of a lack of Republican support prior to Election Day. GOP Senators came onboard with the bill Monday after a group of five senators, headed by Baldwin and Susan Collins (R-Maine), unveiled an amendment that contained religious freedom provisions (The Hill). 

Biden on Wednesday issued a statement in support of the bill, saying “love is love, and Americans should have the right to marry the person they love. Today’s bipartisan vote brings the United States one step closer to protecting that right in law.” He urged Congress to “quickly send the bill to my desk where I will promptly sign it into law.”

Vox: The significance of the Senate’s historic vote on same-sex marriage.

Bloomberg News: These 37 Republicans voted against a bill to protect same-sex marriage.

House Republicans began voting on internal conference rules change proposals Wednesday, a major priority for right-wing members who have withheld support for Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) to be Speaker, writes The Hill’s Emily Brooks. Many of those are measures pushed by the House Freedom Caucus that, on the whole, would give more power to individual members rather than leadership. Proposals include banning earmarks, changing the structure for selecting committee members and adding a “majority of the majority” rule for appropriations bills. 

Politico: McCarthy’s next step on the GOP tightrope: Navigating concessions to conservatives.

A Democratic-led push for a bipartisan fix to the nation’s debt ceiling while the party still holds control of Congress is getting a chilly reception from Senate Republicans, The Hill’s Aris Folley reports. While some Senate GOP leaders haven’t ruled out a compromise with Democrats to address the debt limit during the lame-duck session, they’ve also expressed some skepticism about the prospects of a deal. 

Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Senate Republican, told The Hill on Tuesday that the chances of bipartisan action on the debt limit before January are “probably not good.” Sen. Roy Blunt (Mo.), a member of GOP leadership, also said he thinks the idea is “less likely” than likely. 

The New York Times: The House considers seating a delegate from the Cherokee Nation. Kim Teehee was named to the post in 2019, and seating her as a nonvoting delegate would fulfill part of a treaty signed in 1836.

Axios: Kids’ privacy online gets year end push in Congress.

The 19th: Congress passes bill to ban NDAs in cases of workplace sexual harassment.

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) will likely be the first woman to serve as Senate president pro tempore, a position that would place her third in line for the presidency. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) plans to nominate Murray, who was just elected to a sixth term, to the position. The Senate president pro tem presides over the Senate in the vice president’s absence (The Seattle Times).

The Hill: Murray seeking to be second Appropriations chairwoman.


IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

INTERNATIONAL   

Polish President Andrzej Duda said Wednesday that the missile that struck his country a day earlier, causing a deadly explosion, was most likely a Ukrainian air defense missile. Calling the strike an “unfortunate accident,” Duda eased fears that Poland and its NATO allies could have been drawn into direct conflict with Russia (Reuters).

“We have no evidence at the moment that it was a rocket launched by Russian forces,” Duda told reporters. “However, there are many indications that it was a missile that was used by Ukraine’s anti-missile defense.”

Early indications suggested that Ukrainian efforts to counter a barrage of roughly 100 Russian missiles close to the border with Poland were the cause of the blast on Tuesday. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said a preliminary analysis also pointed to a Ukrainian missile being responsible for the explosion, but a fuller investigation is still underway. Stressing that there was no indication of a deliberate attack by Russia, Stoltenberg said the blame ultimately still belongs to Moscow (The New York Times).

The White House said it has “full confidence” in Poland’s investigation and also said “the party ultimately responsible for this tragic incident is Russia, which launched a barrage of missiles on Ukraine specifically intended to target civilian infrastructure. Ukraine had — and has — every right to defend itself.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday insisted the missile was not Ukrainian, telling Ukrainian news outlets, “I have no doubt that it was not our missile or our missile strike. I want us to be fair, and if it was the use of our air defense, then I want that evidence” (The Hill).

The Wall Street Journal: Ukrainian analysis identifies Western supply chain behind Iran’s drones.

NPR: With winter approaching, Ukraine prepares to fight on frozen ground.

The Wall Street Journal: Russia agrees to renew Ukraine grain deal, UN says.

Bloomberg News: Republicans pledge to give Ukraine aid tough scrutiny with House control.

STATE WATCH

At least 32 transgender and gender-nonconforming people have been killed since the beginning of the year, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) reported Wednesday. According to the report, more than 300 transgender individuals have been killed in the U.S. since 2013, when the FBI began reporting hate crimes motivated by anti-transgender bias. The report coincides with Transgender Awareness Week, observed each year beginning Nov. 13 and leading up to Transgender Day of Remembrance on Nov. 20, which memorializes victims of fatal violence (The Hill).

“Ten years and over three hundred deaths that we know of is a grim milestone,” Tori Cooper, the director of community engagement at the HRC’s Transgender Justice Initiative, said Wednesday. “I call on transgender people everywhere and our allies to respond to this dark moment by advocating anywhere and everywhere, to whomever will listen, in support of our lived & legal equality — and, most importantly, our lives. We will honor their lives and their memories with action.”

The 19th: Data on transgender people is hard to come by. This survey is changing that.

As violence against transgender and nonbinary people rises, lawmakers in various states continue to introduce legislation targeting the transgender community.

In Texas, Republicans introduced several bills this week, including at least two measures that seek to criminalize gender-affirming care for minors and one that would prevent children from attending drag performances (NBC News).

And in Virginia, a state legislator proposed a bill that seeks to bar transgender students in K-12 schools and colleges from competing on sports teams that match their gender identities (The Washington Post).

The Washington Post: Anti-trans laws are on the rise. Here’s a look at where — and what kind.


OPINION

■ Three major tasks Democrats must tackle before 2024, by Jennifer Rubin, columnist, The Washington Post. https://wapo.st/3UHqBlF 

■ The auto industry is the economy’s best hope right now, by Conor Sen, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/3tDMW7P


WHERE AND WHEN

👉 The Hill: Share a news query tied to an expert journalist’s insights: The Hill launched something new and (we hope) engaging via text with Editor-in-Chief Bob Cusack. Learn more and sign up HERE.

The House meets at 10 a.m. ​​

The Senate meets at 10 a.m. and will resume consideration of the Respect for Marriage Act.

The president will receive the President’s Daily Briefing at noon.

Vice President Harris travels to Bangkok, Thailand, where she will attend events for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC).

Second gentleman Doug Emhoff travels to Bangkok with the vice president.

Secretary Blinken is in Bangkok for the APEC Ministerial Meeting.


ELSEWHERE

ENVIRONMENT

Democrats’ overperformance in the midterm elections, even as Republicans sought to blame them for gas and energy costs, has emboldened activists and climate hawks who ran on the issue, writes The Hill’s Zack Budryk. Exit polling indicates that despite high energy prices and Republican attempts to tie them to Democratic policies, 9 percent of voters ranked climate change as their top issue — the same percentage that answered immigration and more than those that answered crime. 

Pete Maysmith, senior VP of campaigns at the League of Conservation Voters, said the results stand in sharp contrast to the Republican rout of 2010. Unlike that midterms cycle, 2022 saw the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, the most ambitious climate bill in U.S. history, and no backlash developed.

A group of the world’s largest economies known as the Group of 20 (G-20) on Wednesday reaffirmed the need to limit global warming to 1.5-degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels. The goal stems from the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Beyond the 1.5-degree threshold, scientists say, the risk of climate catastrophes increases significantly. 

Special Climate Envoy John Kerry said that “a few” countries have resisted putting the 1.5 degree target into whatever agreement comes out of the COP27 climate summit currently being held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. 

The inclusion of the target in the G20 statement may bolster its stature at COP27. The 1.5 degree target was set out in the Paris Agreement (The Hill and The New York Times).

The New York Times: A new measure of climate’s toll: disasters are now common across the U.S. A new report found that 90 percent of all counties nationwide have suffered a major disaster since 2011.

TECH

New Twitter boss Elon Musk issued an ultimatum to employees Wednesday morning: either commit to a new “hardcore” Twitter or leave the company with severance pay.

“If you are sure that you want to be part of the new Twitter, please click yes on the link below,” the email read, linking to an online form staff had to sign by 5 p.m. ET Thursday to remain at their jobs. Musk told staff in the email that they will have to be “extremely hardcore” going forward.

“This will mean working long hours at high intensity,” he wrote. “Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade.”

Musk, who in less than a month of ownership has cut half of Twitter’s staff and allowed content moderation to wane and misinformation to run rampant on the site, resulting in an exodus of top executives and major advertisers, faces sharp declines in revenue and possible bankruptcy (The Washington Post). 

He said on Wednesday he expects to reduce his time at Twitter and eventually find a new leader to run the site, adding that he hopes to complete an organizational restructuring this week (The Wall Street Journal and Reuters).

The Verge: Musk says the new Twitter Blue will relaunch on Nov. 29. The $7.99 service that gave people access to the blue check mark was launched last week before quickly being yanked.

PANDEMIC & HEALTH 

Pediatric health provider groups are calling on the Biden administration to declare a national emergency to help them combat the surge of hospitalizations due to respiratory illnesses in children. Seasonal flu, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and other respiratory viruses are hitting young children especially hard this year. The resulting hospitalizations are putting an immense strain on a pediatric health system that is still reeling from COVID-19 (The Hill).

CNN: Reduce your risk of getting sick this Thanksgiving season.

NBC News: COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations are falling in the U.S., but doctors worry the virus could re-emerge as immunity wanes.

More than 1 billion young people could be at risk of facing hearing loss, a new study shows. “It is estimated that 0.67–1.35 billion adolescents and young adults worldwide could be at risk of hearing loss from exposure to unsafe listening practices,” the study, which was published in BMJ Journal on Tuesday, found. 

Your risk of hearing loss depends on how loud, how long and how often you are exposed to certain noises, and tinnitus, or ringing in the ears, is often a sign that you may have engaged in unsafe listening (NPR).

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported as of this morning, according to Johns Hopkins University (trackers all vary slightly): 1,075,951. Current U.S. COVID-19 deaths are 2,344 for the week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (The CDC shifted its tally of available data from daily to weekly, now reported on Fridays.)

THE CLOSER

And finally … 🦃 It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for this week’s Morning Report Quiz! Inspired by the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, we’re eager for some smart guesses about turkey days past and present.

The famous Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is tied for the second-oldest Thanksgiving parade in the United States with which other city’s parade?

1. America’s Thanksgiving Parade in Detroit 

2. Philadelphia’s 6abc Dunkin’ Thanksgiving Day Parade

3. America’s Hometown Celebration in Plymouth, Mass.

4. Ameren Thanks For Giving Parade in St. Louis

What is the most popular Thanksgiving side dish, according to Statista?

1. Brussels sprouts

2. Green bean casserole

3. Stuffing

4. Mashed potatoes

Who was the first president to officially pardon a Thanksgiving turkey?

1. John F. Kennedy

2. Abraham Lincoln

3. George H. W. Bush

4. Ronald Reagan 

According to a new survey by the American Farm Bureau Federation, how much more expensive will a Thanksgiving dinner be this year than it was in 2021?

1. 20 percent

2. 5 percent

3. 45 percent

4. 15 percent

Email your responses to kkarisch@thehill.com, and please add “Quiz” to subject lines. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday.


Stay Engaged

We want to hear from you! Email: Alexis Simendinger and Kristina Karisch. Follow us on Twitter (@asimendinger and @kristinakarisch) and suggest this newsletter to friends!

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The Memo: GOP at crossroads over Trump

The Republican Party, which had hoped to be flying high following last week’s midterm elections, is instead in a state of flux — with former President Trump at the core of the unease. 

Trump launched his third bid for the presidency in a meandering speech at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday evening. 

But Trump’s campaign launch came at a moment of political and legal vulnerability for the former president. 

Many fingers are pointed at him for the GOP’s disappointing performance in the midterms. There is also wide speculation that he has chosen to begin his campaign so early to make it easier to cast any coming criminal indictments as politically motivated. 

Trump is in legal peril over the handling of sensitive information recovered in an FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago; efforts by him and his allies to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia; and his role in inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. 

Trump and Trumpism are vexing the GOP on Capitol Hill as well. 

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) is trying to manage the restive pro-Trump faction of his party as he seeks to become Speaker in January. 

McCarthy easily put down a challenge from Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) on Tuesday to become the GOP’s nominee for the position. 

But 31 House Republicans voted for Biggs, underscoring McCarthy’s challenges in getting support from an outright majority in the House when the crunch vote comes. 

Even though Trump endorsed McCarthy, some of the former president’s most fervent allies in the House — such as Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) — are among McCarthy’s fiercest critics. 

Meanwhile, the Senate GOP was roiled this week by the first challenge to Sen. Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) leadership in the 15 years he has headed the conference. 

McConnell batted back the attempt to oust him by Sen Rick Scott (R-Fla.) with relative ease on Wednesday, winning the vote 37-10 with one senator voting present. 

But Scott’s decision to challenge McConnell in the first place was seen as evidence of dissent and dismay in GOP ranks after they failed to capture the majority last week.

The Senate leadership election was held behind closed doors, but several of the most pro-Trump senators backed Scott. The Floridian was nominated by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), while Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) cast one of the votes in his favor.

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), whose clinched-fist salute to protesters at the Capitol before violence broke out on Jan. 6 caused uproar, also said well in advance of the vote that he would not back McConnell. 

CNN’s Manu Raju tweeted that Hawley told him on Tuesday that McConnell could not lead the GOP back to the majority in the Senate. 

“If you want to be a majority party, clearly what we’re doing isn’t working,” Hawley said. “It hasn’t been working for a long time. And I think you look at independent voters … we gave them nothing.” 

Comments like that are evidence that the GOP, which thought it had a clear lane to sweeping electoral success, instead finds itself abruptly at a crossroads. 

Figures like Hawley appear to want the party to conform to a Trump template — populist, protectionist and combative. 

But others, like McConnell, clearly believe the party has embraced the former president much too tightly — to its electoral detriment. 

McConnell on Tuesday told reporters that it was “pretty obvious” what had befallen the party in the midterms.  

“We underperformed among independents and moderates because their impression of many of the people in our party in leadership roles is that they’re involved in chaos, negativity, excessive attacks, and it frightened independent and moderate Republican voters,” he said. 

That seemed a clear shot at Trump. So did McConnell’s reprising of his earlier worries about “candidate quality,” a phrase seen as a jab at prominent Trump endorsees such as Mehmet Oz and Herschel Walker. 

Oz, crucially, lost the Pennsylvania Senate seat previously held by Republican Pat Toomey. Walker trailed Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock in the initial vote in Georgia. The Georgia race now moves to a Dec. 6 runoff. 

To the relief of many Republicans, Trump did at least urge voters during his campaign launch to turn out to back Walker next month. 

There is one further wrinkle to the GOP’s grappling with Trump: the role of conservative media. 

The stance of outlets in Rupert Murdoch’s stable is a particular subject of fascination across the political spectrum. 

The New York Post, which had run a front page mocking Trump as “Trumpty Dumpty” in the immediate wake of the midterms, relegated news of his campaign launch to page 26 of its print edition on Wednesday. Later that day, the lead story on the Post’s website outlined GOP donor concerns about Trump under the headline, “Done with Don.” 

A Wall Street Journal editorial, first published on Monday evening, lamented Trump’s determination to mount another White House bid.  

“The GOP, and the country, would be best served if Mr. Trump ceded the field to the next generation of Republican leaders to compete for the nomination in 2024,” the Journal’s editors wrote. “If Mr. Trump insists on running, then Republican voters will have to decide if they want to nominate the man most likely to produce a GOP loss and total power for the progressive left.” 

One thing’s for sure: With Trump beginning his third campaign, seven years after he first launched on the road to the White House, the war over his influence on Republican politics is entering a new phase. 

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage.

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How Biden is handling a new Trump White House bid

President Biden’s White House doesn’t want to give too much attention to former President Trump, even though it knows the attacks are on the way after his announcement of a presidential bid on Tuesday night. 

While the White House used Trump as an effective foil during an unexpectedly strong midterms for the party, Biden doesn’t want to get into a mud-slinging contest with his predecessor now that the Senate is safely in Democratic hands. 

He also doesn’t want to give Trump oxygen as he tries to mount a return to the White House. 

That doesn’t mean Democrats will ignore Trump’s attacks on Biden. 

The White House and Democratic National Committee (DNC) have signaled they are prepared to defend Biden’s record and remind the country of Trump’s, a strategy that would leave the attacks on Trump to surrogates — allowing Biden to focus on his day job of being president. 

Biden and his team gave subtle nods to Trump’s announcement on Tuesday. 

The White House unveiled a new web page titled “The Biden-Harris Record” that outlines the administration’s accomplishments on more than a dozen topics, including infrastructure, reproductive rights and climate.

The president’s personal Twitter account on Tuesday posted a video with the caption “Donald Trump failed America” that highlighted the former president’s rhetoric about the Capitol riot, his opposition to abortion access and his inability to pass an infrastructure bill.

And the DNC announced Tuesday it is hiring press staff in early primary states like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina to drive local coverage of Trump and other potential candidates.

Biden himself has sought to play it cool.

The president, who is in Bali, Indonesia, for the Group of 20 summit, was with French President Emmanuel Macron as Trump was set to take the stage to make his 2024 announcement in Florida. 

Reporters asked Biden and Macron if they had a reaction to Trump’s news. The two looked at each other briefly, and each cracked a slight smirk. 

“Not really,” Biden said.

Trump’s presence in the 2024 field is unlikely to change Biden’s own calculus for running for reelection. 

Biden, who turns 80 on Sunday, has emerged from the midterms in a stronger position to run for reelection and has said he will discuss the matter with his family over the holidays. 

“President Biden is not under any immediate pressure to respond in kind. Letting Trump’s announcement sink in with the electorate is probably one of the smartest pre-campaign decisions the Biden team can make,” said former Rep. Chris Carney (D-Pa.), a Biden ally.

There are still questions in Democratic circles on whether Biden is up for another term and whether he’d be vulnerable to defeat in 2024 — especially to a non-Trump Republican candidate such as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. 

Polls suggested ahead of the elections that a large number of Democrats wanted a different choice for president in 2024. 

Yet Biden did defeat Trump in 2024 and is generally seen by most Democrats as the party’s strongest candidate despite his low poll numbers. 

Democratic strategist Antjuan Seawright said there’s “absolutely not” pressure on Biden to announce, especially given the Democrats’ better-than-expected performance this midterm cycle.

“Democrats, Republicans and independent thinkers demonstrated that they are more in line with Joe Biden’s way of governing and his presidency than they are the right-wing, MAGA, election-denying, insurrection-supporting leader … and I think the midterms were a referendum on the president,” he said.

Even some Republicans think Biden should stick with his timeline and not change anything because of Trump.

“There’s no reason that Biden should change his calculus because of Trump’s announcement. One doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with the other,” said GOP strategist Doug Heye.

Trump, while launching his 2024 bid, argued that the country had slipped into anarchy under Biden and suggested that voters did not yet realize how bad the Biden administration’s policies would be for them.

Seawright said that Democrats are confident Biden will time his potential reelection announcement well.

“I think the president is probably taking the right approach. I think if anyone understands tone, temperature, timing, direction, it’s Joe Biden,” he said.

The president suggested right after the midterms that if Trump were to run in 2024, he wouldn’t win. When asked at a post-midterms press conference how other world leaders should view this moment for America, with Trump running for the presidency again, Biden said he will make sure Trump doesn’t take power.

“We just have to demonstrate that he will not take power if he does run, making sure he — under legitimate efforts of our Constitution — does not become the next president again,” the president said.

Carney said that Trump’s announcement on Tuesday showed that “his ego and hubris are as high as his energy is low,” while Biden’s future decision on a next term won’t be based on ego.

“President Biden will make a thoughtful, prudent decision based upon what he sees as best for the nation, not what is best for his ego,” he said.

Seawright argued that the real pressure isn’t on Biden, it’s on Trump and what his next steps are now that he has launched his bid.

“The former president might have announced, that’s only step one,” he said, noting that Trump has to see what other Republicans will run in 2024 and what support he gets from Republicans, as well as deal with his own legal challenges.

“If anyone is in a hurry to do anything, it should be Donald Trump,” Seawright said.

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Democrats push to fix debt ceiling during lame duck

A Democratic-led push for a bipartisan fix to the nation’s debt ceiling while the party still holds control of Congress is getting a chilly reception from Senate Republicans. 

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) told reporters this week that he’d like to “get a debt ceiling done in this work period.” But Schumer also insisted the matter be handled with GOP support.     

“The best way to get it done — the way it’s been done the last two or three times — is bipartisan, and I intend shortly to sit down with the Republican leader and try to work that out,” Schumer said.

While some Senate GOP leaders haven’t ruled out a compromise with Democrats to address the debt limit during the lame-duck session, they’ve also expressed some skepticism about the prospects of a deal. 

Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Senate Republican, told The Hill on Tuesday that the chances of bipartisan action on the debt limit before January are “probably not good.” Sen. Roy Blunt (Mo.), a member of GOP leadership, also said he thinks the idea is “less likely.” 

The comments come as Democrats have ramped up calls for bipartisan action on the debt limit before January amid growing concerns over a potential showdown next year, when Congress is projected to usher in a new Republican-led House.

The push follows reporting that House Republicans are considering using the fiscal deadline as a leverage point to secure potential reforms to programs like Social Security that have already generated strong pushback from Democrats.

“We very much want to deal with the debt ceiling in the lame duck,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) told reporters, adding such a move should also “be bipartisan” while expressing concerns about “gutting Social Security.”

“Raising the debt limit sooner rather than later provides assurance to the global markets as well as to our own economy, and the next session is a big unknown,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) also said.

Democrats say the party could use budget reconciliation, an arcane procedure that could allow them to pass legislation raising the debt limit without Republican support in the Senate. But with just weeks remaining until the current congressional session is set to end, Congress is short on time.

“It takes a lot of time, and it ought to be bipartisan as it has been in the past,” Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said. “It ought to be bipartisan, and there’s even bipartisan ways to do it that kind of put the burden on Democrat shoulders.”

The Bipartisan Policy Center estimated in June that Congress will likely need to take action on the debt ceiling no earlier than the third quarter of next year, or risk a historic default. But Democrats argue waiting until next year will increase those chances. 

“We know how Republicans play here. We know it’s always showdowns. It’s always playing to their base,” Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) said.

Last year, Senate Republicans helped Democrats raise the ceiling as part of a bipartisan deal worked out between Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). But the deal only came just days before experts warned the nation could default on its debt, an outcome that would have devastating effects for the nation’s economy.

At the time, the Treasury Department said it had to resort to “extraordinary measures” to stave off a default.

But Republicans have also expressed resistance to the idea of working with Democrats to act on the debt limit absent broader consideration about the country’s finances.

“I’m not going to be interested in it unless they put some reforms in place that are going to prevent us from running up debt every year,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said. 

“I would hope that we’re having a serious conversation about budgeting and about debt if we do that, because that’s always been the issue,” Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) said, while adding he thinks a bipartisan debt limit deal over the next few weeks is unlikely.

Some experts similarly say debt limit negotiations and spending reforms must go hand in hand, particularly at a time the nation has seen high spending in response to the coronavirus pandemic. 

“When you lift the debt ceiling, you take a pause, think about whether your fiscal situation is healthy,” Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told The Hill in a previous interview. 

“And if it’s not, it’s a great opportunity to put in place either policies or processes that could make it better,” she said.

But whether the debt limit will be a problem handled before January remains to be seen.

“It’ll be next year sometime when the extraordinary measures are finished, so we’ll have plenty of time to think about it,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said on Wednesday.

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McConnell seeks to unite a divided GOP

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) faces a difficult task of mending the fractures within his conference that exploded into the open as lawmakers fought over who was to blame for the party’s failures in the midterm elections. 

Much of the battle centered on McConnell, who on Wednesday beat back an effort by National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) Chairman Rick Scott (R-Fla.) to end his leadership reign. 

Scott argued that McConnell’s lack of a clearly defined agenda hurt Republicans in the midterm elections and questioned whether the decision by a super PAC affiliated with McConnell, the Senate Leadership Fund, to pull out of the Arizona Senate race may have cost their party the Senate majority. 

McConnell ended up easily winning the leadership race, but he did not emerge unscathed. 

Thirty-seven Republican senators voted by secret ballot for McConnell after Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) nominated him to serve his ninth term as Senate Republican leader. But 11 did not support him, with 10 GOP senators voting for Scott and one voting “present.” 

“We got to do something different,” said Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who voted for Scott. “We’re not appealing to working-class independents, we don’t have their confidence.”

“This election, they don’t like President Biden but they looked at Republicans and said, ‘Nah, we don’t know that you guys will really do anything,’” he said. “We have to win those voters, which to me means we have to do something different.”

“We need to have a serious discussion now about our convictions as a party, which we started today,” he added. “We need to have a more thorough one.” 

McConnell projected unity by characterizing the 31/2-hour debate as a productive discussion about how to do better in the 2024 elections. He also tried to get his colleagues to focus on the Dec. 6 Senate runoff in Georgia, which could take them closer to the majority if they defeat Sen. Raphael Warnock (D). 

“We just had a rather lengthy — as you could tell — discussion about the way forward for Senate Republicans,” he said at a press conference after winning reelection. “We’ve collectively, I think, had a good discussion about what happened in the election and what happens in the next election.”

“And I think everybody in our conference agrees we want to give it our best shot to finish the job in Georgia and concentrate on that for the next month,” he said. 

McConnell downplayed the 10 Republican votes he lost as a sign of a healthy discussion of differences among colleagues. 

“I’m not in any way offended by having an opponent or having a few votes in opposition,” he said. “I’m pretty proud of 37 to 10.” 

McConnell did not mention former President Trump by name, but made it clear that he thinks Trump’s divisive style of politics hurt Republican candidates, especially Mehmet Oz, who was trying to win the Pennsylvania Senate seat by appealing to moderates.

“Here’s the problem: We underperformed among voters who did not like President Biden’s performance, among independents and among moderate Republicans, who looked at us and concluded [there was] too much chaos, too much negativity, and we turned off a lot of these centrist voters,” he said. 

He said this trend was “fatal” in Pennsylvania because Oz’s message of moderation “got muddled” at the end of the race, which was capped by a rally with Trump in Latrobe. 

McConnell dismissed the notion that the contested leadership race is a sign that his days as Senate leader are numbered. “I’m not going anywhere,” he said. 

One McConnell ally mocked Scott’s leadership bid for getting crushed by a lopsided vote. The GOP senator said it reminded him of a video clip posted online of Bambi meeting Godzilla in which Bambi gets flattened. 

Scott came under heavy criticism at Tuesday’s meeting over his handling of the NRSC. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) questioned his spending decisions, and Sens. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) called for an independent audit of the committee’s finances. 

Scott responded Wednesday with a scathing statement that accused his predecessor at the NRSC, Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), of allowing “improper bonuses” to outgoing staff after Republicans lost the Senate majority. 

“When I took over, I immediately became aware that hundreds of thousands of dollars in unauthorized and improper bonuses were paid to outgoing staff after the majority was lost in 2020,” he said, reflecting how nasty the party infighting had become. 

Scott said after Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s marathon meetings that he wasn’t stung by colleagues’ criticisms. 

“Run a big company, it’s been my life,” he said, referring to the criticism he had to weather when he ran Columbia/HCA, a major health care company. 

Asked if he thought Republicans could put the nasty leadership fight behind them and heal the wounds it caused, Scott replied tersely: “Yup, I think so.” 

Republicans who criticized McConnell’s leadership style said he has spent too much time playing defense against Democrats and not enough time crafting an agenda telling voters how Republicans would govern if they had control of the Senate. 

More junior senators complained that they did not have enough input into major bills and often had been forced to vote up or down on high-profile bills with little time to review or shape the legislation. 

Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said Scott’s leadership challenge put a spotlight on these complaints. 

“I think Rick Scott accomplished a point,” he told reporters. 

“Several members are frustrated, and have been for some time, that they want to see a more inclusive process. They don’t want to see so many backroom deals. They want to, at least, be in the backroom deal if they’re making them,” Cramer said. 

Asked about the complaints about the lack of inclusiveness, McConnell said colleagues have plenty of opportunity to discuss issues and priorities by calling for special conferences. 

“Any five of us can call a conference to discuss any particular issue. We acquainted our members with the tools they have if they have an idea they want to promote,” he said. 

Hovering over the intraparty skirmishing is McConnell’s broken relationship with Trump, who last week endorsed Scott as someone who could knock McConnell out of his leadership job. 

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), one of Trump’s closest allies in the Senate, said he wanted to see a change in the Republican leadership and voted for Scott. “I voted for change. I voted for Rick. Nothing against Mitch, I just think we need change,” he said. 

McConnell told reporters Wednesday that he had no desire to comment on Trump’s announcement that he will run again for president. 

“The way I’m going to go into this presidential primary season is to stay out of it. I don’t have a dog in that fight. I think it’s going to be a highly contested nomination fight with other candidates entering,” he said. 

Wednesday’s leadership drama was mostly confined to the race between McConnell and Scott. 

The other members of the GOP leadership team, including Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.), Republican Conference Chairman John Barrasso (Wyo.), Republican Policy Committee Chairwoman Joni Ernst (Iowa) and incoming NRSC Chairman Steve Daines (Mont.), were elected without opposition. 

Al Weaver contributed. 

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