Reuters: U.S.

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

The Hill's 12:30 Report - Lawmakers agree to funding deal

The Hill 12:30 Report
 
 
 
IN CONGRESS

*Insert the Shark Tank TV set, secretive notes, tense music and dramatic anticipation*

We have a deal!:

© Giphy

 

Click here for the full effect --> https://bit.ly/3tKg8cY ;)

 

Congressional negotiators have reached a bipartisan deal to fund the government through late September. https://bit.ly/3Kt0JUV 

 

What Democrats are happy about: “The legislation includes what Democrats have lauded as the biggest increase to nondefense discretionary spending in four years.”

 

What Republicans are happy about: “The GOP has … touted a $42 billion increase for defense spending in the package, saying the deal achieves dollar-for-dollar parity for defense and nondefense increases.”  

 

What about Ukraine?: The bill includes $14 billion in aid to Ukraine. 

 

What else is in the bill: https://bit.ly/3Kt0JUV

 
TIDBIT — SPEED READERS, GO!:

Punchbowl News’ John Bresnahan tweeted, “The $1.5 trillion omnibus is 2741 pages long. The House will vote on it later today (meaning there's zero chance members will have a chance to read it.)” https://bit.ly/3CvoxVn 

 
HERE’S THE FULL TEXT OF THE BILL:

https://bit.ly/37gXaTH

 
HAPPENING TODAY AND FRIDAY — HEARING FROM THE BOSS:

© AP/Patrick Semansky, file

 

President Biden is speaking at Senate Democrats’ caucus retreat today at 6:15 p.m. EST. Biden will also address the House Democratic retreat in Philadelphia on Friday. https://bit.ly/3hV6puW

 

It’s Wednesday. I’m Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what’s coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com — and follow along on Twitter @CateMartel and Facebook.

 

Did someone forward this to you? Want your own copy? Sign up here to receive The Hill's 12:30 Report in your inbox daily: http://bit.ly/2UoupvN

 
THE LATEST IN UKRAINE

How much progress has Russia made? And how successful has Ukraine been in fending them off?:

CNN’s Jim Sciutto has a helpful explainer on where the situation stands. https://bit.ly/3pOLBt6

 

The gist: “Nearly two weeks into the invasion, the war in Ukraine has become a slow grinding conflict. Not the blitzkrieg advance the Russian military had planned and hoped for.” 

 

Watch the 2-minute, 42-second clip: https://bit.ly/3pOLBt6

 
UKRAINE’S GOAL, ACCORDING TO A SENIOR OFFICIAL — KEEP CONTROL OF ITS MAJOR CITIES FOR ANOTHER 7-10 DAYS:

© AP/Efrem Lukatsky

 

Via Reuters, here’s the reasoning: https://reut.rs/375CL3I 

 

Vadym Denysenko, adviser to Ukraine's interior minister, said Russia was desperate for at least some kind of victory, citing the cities of Mariupol or the capital Kyiv as the most likely targets. ‘They need at least some victory before they are forced into the final negotiations,’ Denysenko wrote on Facebook. ‘Therefore our task is to stand for the next 7-10 days.’ ” https://reut.rs/375CL3I 

 
GAS PRICES

‘Loss of Russian Oil Leaves a Void Not Easily Filled, Straining Market’:

Via The New York Times’s Clifford Krauss, “Oil prices were already rising fast as the world economy emerged from Covid-19 shutdowns and producers stretched to meet growing demand. International oil companies had cut back investment over the last two years … With the announcement of the American embargo on Tuesday, prices will probably climb higher, energy analysts say.” https://nyti.ms/3HVZDiU 

 

What percentage of global energy supply comes from Russia?: Roughly 1 out of every 10 barrels of oil 

 

What countries could fill that gap in supply? It gets tricky: “Only Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have spare capacity, together a little more than 2.5 million barrels a day. Venezuela and Iran could contribute about 1.5 million barrels a day to the market, but that would require lifting American sanctions against those countries.” 

 

Does the U.S. have extra oil?: “[T]he United States could increase output by more than a million barrels a day — but doing so would take a year to achieve, and require oil companies to harness more manpower and equipment.”  

 

More on what this means: https://nyti.ms/3HVZDiU

 
HELPFUL READ — ‘WHAT DOES A US BAN ON RUSSIAN OIL ACCOMPLISH?’:

Via The Associated Press’s Cathy Bussewitz and Matthew Daly: https://abcn.ws/3vRdMvq 

 
‘DEMOCRATS LOOK FOR COVER ON RISING GAS PRICES’:

Via The Hill’s Jordain Carney, “Democrats are looking for ways to lower gas prices, which have skyrocketed in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and could rise further as the U.S. and other countries move to ban Russian imports.” https://bit.ly/3IRFRq9 

 
WHAT TO EXPECT WITH GAS PRICES:

© AP/Jae C. Hong

 

Via CNN Business’s Chris Isidore: https://cnn.it/35JNbG2

 
GREAAAAT:

The Hill’s Niall Stanage tweeted a photo of gas prices at the closest gas station to him in Washington, D.C. Photo: https://bit.ly/3pR0AD1

 
LATEST WITH COVID-19

‘CDC says avoid travel to New Zealand, Hong Kong and Thailand as covid cases surge’:

Via The Washington Post’s Hannah Sampson: https://wapo.st/35JNMYi

 
CASE NUMBERS:

Coronavirus cases in the U.S.: 79,370,034

 

U.S. death toll: 961,993

 

Breakdown of the numbers: https://cnn.it/2UAgW3y 

 
VACCINATION NUMBERS:

Total number of vaccinations administered in the U.S.: 556 million shots have been given. 

 

Seven-day average of doses administered: An average of 134,885 doses 

 

For context: The U.S. population is roughly 331 million. 

 

Breakdown of the numbers: https://bloom.bg/3iVTPLH 

 
GETTING TRACTION

Why everyone is talking about spiders on Twitter:

Axios’s Karri Peifer writes, “Giant spiders expected to drop from sky across the East Coast this spring.” https://bit.ly/3Kuj83Y 

 

The longer version isn’t any better: “An invasive species of spider the size of a child's hand is expected to ‘colonize' the entire East Coast this spring by parachuting down from the sky, researchers at the University of Georgia announced last week.”  

 

The full story — sorry: https://bit.ly/3Kuj83Y 

 

Come on. We just had the influx of cicadas last year!

 
IN WASHINGTON, DC

I’m sorry, what?:

© APPatrick Semansky, file

 

Via DCist’s Amanda Michelle Gomez, The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) will shut down yellow line access from Washington, D.C., to Virginia for seven to eight months for repairs. https://bit.ly/3MFzFnE 

 

Specifically: Yellow line access over the Potomac River — between Pentagon and L’Enfant Plaza stations 

 

Soooo, what will happen?: WMATA says it will announce alternative travel options before the closure begins. 

 
YOU CAN’T MAKE THIS UP:

WJLA-TV’s Tom Roussey pointed out: “And as if that's not enough, Metro says getting the future Potomac Yard station ready will require shutting down all rail service south of Reagan National Airport from Sept 10 to Oct 22. So riders who experienced a summer shutdown in 2019 will have to do it all over again.” https://bit.ly/3CtAURR 

 

What timing: “So basically, Potomac Yard Metro station is expected to open in the fall, and riders at the new station on day one will be on trains that can't cross the Potomac unless they take the Blue Line route through Arlington Cemetery.” https://bit.ly/3HXtWWH 

 
NOTABLE TWEETS:

This photo gives me so much anxiety:

CNN’s Kristin Wilson tweeted a photo of quite the ladder setup. Photo: https://bit.ly/3MyEQ8L 

 

LOL — my favorite reaction: Politico’s Sarah Ferris captioned the photo, “Me, painting my house when my husband isn't watching” https://bit.ly/3pLN3N5 

 

More reactions: https://bit.ly/3CtizVc

 

We are in a new era:

For The Win’s Alex McDaniel tweeted, “tried to give my son cash for the book fair and he looked at me like i was a martian and said ‘just put some money in my e-wallet account.’ ” https://bit.ly/3HT7Wfn 

 

McDaniel then added: “you know how 8-year-olds are always like ‘paper money is such a hassle, just put it on the card’ ” https://bit.ly/3hQNcua 

 
ON TAP:

The House is in. The Senate is out. President Biden is in Washington, D.C. Vice President Harris is on her way to Poland. 

 

7:30 a.m. EST: Vice President Harris left for Warsaw, Poland. 

 

10 – 11 a.m. EST: First votes in the House. The House’s full agenda today: https://bit.ly/3CtOchp 

 

11 a.m. EST: President Biden received the President’s Daily Brief. 

 

1:30 – 3 p.m. EST: Last votes in the House. 

 

6:15 p.m. EST: President Biden delivers remarks at the Democratic Senators Issues Conference at Howard University. This is closed to press.

 

10 a.m. EST Thursday: The Senate meets. The Senate’s full agenda tomorrow: https://bit.ly/3CtWDct

 
WHAT TO WATCH:

1 p.m. EST: White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3CpLNnW 

 

2 p.m. EST: President Biden and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo meet with business leaders and governors to discuss competitiveness legislation. Livestream: https://bit.ly/3IVWUr9 

 
IN LIGHTER NEWS:

© Giphy

 

Today is National Meatball Day

 

And because you read this far, here’s a pup with a pretty odd sleeping spot: https://bit.ly/3CwX8CO

 
To view past editions of The Hill's 12:30 Report, CLICK HERE.
To receive The Hill's 12:30 Report in your inbox, PLEASE SIGN UP HERE.
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email
The Hill
 
View in your browser
Link

No comments:

Post a Comment