| Congress returns to Washington today as top lawmakers prepare to meet with President Biden this week to discuss the administration’s ambitious infrastructure and spending proposals, and members of the GOP remain consumed with chatter surrounding the “big lie” and the future of House GOP Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney (Wyo.). The “big four” leaders — Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.,), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) — are set to meet with Biden at the White House for the first time since the inauguration, with the White House facing a tall task to win GOP support in hopes of passing $4.1 trillion in infrastructure and jobs spending. The meetings are not limited to the leaders. Biden is also slated to sit down with a group of GOP senators on Thursday, headlined by Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.), the author of a $568 billion infrastructure blueprint, as the two sides battle over the true definition of “infrastructure.” The GOP’s slimmed-down proposal includes funding for traditional infrastructure projects, including roads, bridges and increased broadband. The sweeping Democratic plan would include funds for manufacturing and to expand access to home and community-based care, among other items. The series of sit-downs will give leaders a sense if a bipartisan bill is possible by early July, which is Pelosi’s stated goal, or if Democrats will be forced to go it alone and advance a bill via budget reconciliation and a simple majority. As The Hill’s Jordain Carney notes, the next 100 days will also serve as a crucial test for the majority party. Schumer noted in a recent interview that along with infrastructure, the Senate is likely to vote on a number of partisan measures, including a bill to overhaul federal elections, which Republicans oppose. That legislation, coupled with a progressive push to pass a $15 minimum wage and a Washington, D.C., statehood bill, is amping up the pressure on the Senate to nix the 60-vote legislative filibuster. “The process that I outlined for S1 is a process that, I think, could very well cause the Senate to evolve,” Schumer told The New York Times’s Ezra Klein during an April interview about the filibuster. The Wall Street Journal: Infrastructure talks could set the course of Biden’s spending plans. Politico: “It's not phony”: Biden hungry for a jobs deal with Republicans. CNN: South Carolina and Montana to end expanded pandemic benefits for jobless residents. The Associated Press: Some states plan big spending with Biden’s proposed infrastructure, jobs and benefits plans. Others wait. The Hill: McCarthy slams Biden infrastructure plan for what he believes are misplaced priorities. As The Hill’s Brett Samuels notes, Wednesday’s Oval Office meeting will be the first face-to-face meeting between Biden and McCarthy since the inaugural, with the pair exhibiting a frosty relationship in the administration’s opening months. While Biden has a long history with McConnell, the same cannot be said of McCarthy, who refused to recognize Biden as president-elect following his election victory and voted to reject the certification of electoral results declaring Biden the winner of certain states. The White House shrugged off the idea that there’s any significance to the fact the two men have interacted sparingly since November. “Do you think tens of millions of people are concerned about him not meeting with Kevin McCarthy?” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said last week when a reporter asked whether the absence of a meeting since January undermined Biden’s efforts to unify the country. Axios: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told "Axios on HBO" he is impatient with the White House's quest for Republican support for Biden's infrastructure package. “The bottom line is the American people want results,” he said. "And frankly, when people got a, you know, $1,400 check or $5,600 check for their family, they didn't say, 'Oh, I can't cash this check because it was done without any Republican votes.’” The New York Times: “We may not have a full two years”: Democrats’ plans hinge on their own good health. The Hill: This week: Congressional leaders to meet with Biden amid GOP reckoning.  © Getty Images Across the aisle, the House GOP is gearing up for a Wednesday vote to oust Cheney, the No. 3 House Republican. Colleagues’ objections? Her continued shots at former President Trump and her break with leadership during its quest to retake the majority next year. The feud between Cheney and other GOP leaders simmered for weeks before boiling over as leaders, along with Trump, threw their support behind Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) ahead of this week’s vote to remove Cheney from leadership. Cheney has shown no signs of backing down, despite expectations the conference will replace her. She maintains that the party should reckon with its Trump-centric issues and the aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, all of which puts her across a dividing line with fellow House conservatives. On Sunday, McCarthy officially threw in his lot for Stefanik, citing conference unity as the reason (The Hill). “To defeat [Speaker] Nancy Pelosi and the socialist agenda, we need to be united. And that starts with leadership,” McCarthy said. “That's why we will have a vote next week. And we want to be united in looking, moving forward. And I think that's what will take place. … As conference chair, you have one of the most critical jobs as the messenger of going forward. Are we talking about what the Democrats are doing on the border? Are we talking about all the missed jobs [in the] report that we just had? Are we building an economy?” The New York congresswoman in 2016 criticized Trump following the emergence of the Access Hollywood tape and she voted against some of the former president’s top priorities, including the 2017 GOP tax bill. Nonetheless, Trump backs her and for that reason, she is likely to replace Cheney. As The Hill’s Scott Wong and Mike Lillis write, Wednesday’s vote will answer multiple questions: the direction of the GOP, the face of the party’s leadership and what role Trump should play in it. “She’s done as a member of leadership. I don’t understand what she’s doing,” said a former House GOP lawmaker. “It’s like political self-immolation. You can’t cancel Trump from the Republican Party; all she’s done is cancel herself.” The Hill: GOP divided over expected Cheney ouster. The Associated Press: Trump’s “Big Lie” imperils Republicans who don’t embrace it. Alexander Bolton, The Hill: McConnell safe in power, despite Trump's wrath. The Hill: Capitol Police watchdog back in spotlight amid security concerns. Politico: Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is the octogenarian everyone's waiting on.  © Getty Images More in politics: Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) says she will seek reelection (The Hill). … Voting advocates say that the urgency and need for federal oversight of state voting procedures — a Democratic legislative priority — has increased as Florida became the latest state this week to implement new voting restrictions, and multiple other states are on the precipice of doing the same (The Hill) … California GOP gubernatorial candidate Caitlyn Jenner said on Sunday that she supports a path to citizenship for the 1.75 million undocumented immigrants in California’s labor force (The Hill). |
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