Asked Bennie Thompson, chairman of Jan. 6 panel, how they'd handle the four Trump allies who have been subpoenaed -- if they don't comply
"Criminal contempt is on the table," Thompson said. "And if it comes to that, there will be no reluctance at all on the committee to do that"
“Oh absolutely,” Thompson said when asked if there would be more subpoenas for Trump officials. He also said they’ve discussed whether to call in Bill Barr.
“We think those four individuals have clear information as to what Donald Trump was doing that day,” Thompson said of Meadows, Patel, Scavino, Bannon.
On GOP lawmakers getting subpoenas. “That’s a matter being discussed. We are not quite at that point….When we are, there will be no reluctance to do it.”
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Moderate Democrats met with House Dem leaders in Pelosi's office for an hour and 15 minutes, and afterward they were was high expectation the vote on the Senate's infrastructure bill would still occur on Monday.
"I'm bringing the bill to the floor on Monday," Hoyer told us
Hoyer also told me Pelosi is "working towards" getting the party's reconciliation bill on the floor by next week, even as there are major differences within their party to resolve. "Both bills are going to pass," he said confidently.
"I'm expecting a vote on Monday, yeah," said Rep. Ed Case, a Blue Dog Democrat, said of the infrastructure bill. Asked about the reconciliation bill, Case said: "We're just trying to keep a lot of trains on the same track," Case said. "That's what's our commitment is to do.”
House Budget plans to meet Friday or Saturday to take up the party’s massive $3.5 trillion economic package. It is NOT the final deal bc there is no deal yet as negotiations within the party intensify.
“Effectively the markup is more procedural than substantive,” Yarmuth said.
The move is an attempt by House Dem leaders to show momentum on the larger bill in a bid to convince progressives to vote for the Senate’s infrastructure plan on Monday after they’ve threatened to sink it over their concerns that the larger plan will be killed by moderates
The panel’s vote will be on the legislation that has been approved by 13 House committees. The committee will bring those individual pieces together and approve it, readying it for eventual floor action.
Bipartisan policing talks dead, per a source familiar with the matter. Booker and Scott talked today. Karen Bass told me “no” talks not in a good place. “I think it's because things have not moved forward. At a certain point, you have to say, are we going to move forward or not?”
Earlier today, Scott contended that talks were on the “finish line.” “We're not in disagreement on any of the issues, we're now working on the language within the agreement and if we walk away now, we walk away on that finish line,” he told me
Booker: “Unfortunately, even with this law enforcement support and further compromises we offered, there was still too wide a gulf with our negotiating partners and we faced significant obstacles to securing a bipartisan deal.”
Jayapal told a group of us she told Pelosi that progressives haven’t changed their view: They are a NO on the infrastructure bill if it comes to a vote Monday — assuming that the larger Democratic reconciliation bill hasn’t passed the Senate by then (which it won’t)
Jayapal thinks that Pelosi will delay the Monday vote on the Senate infrastructure bill because Jayapal predicts it will fail then, though the speaker has not indicated she will do that.
Jayapal said they didn't talk a lower price tag because they don't know where the Senate is
Jayapal reiterates that her caucus has more than half of progressives on her side on this. More than 48 members, enough to sink the infrastructure bill on Monday
Manchin says Dems will need a lot of "clarity" to get reconciliation bill together by next week --- and calls for a pause. "Let's wait and see whatever we need... The main thing is inflation."
But AOC says infra bill is going down on Sept. 27 if reconciliation hasn't passed
AOC: “So this is the thing you have a very small destructive group of members who want to hold the entire country's agenda hostage for an arbitrary date. And this is not it's not representative of the agenda of the caucus is not representative of the agenda of the President”
She added: “We need to stay focused on the original process that allowed us to move forward in the first place. … I'm more than happy to vote for the infrastructure bill, if we're able to figure out a way to bring it up in a concurrent fashion with reconciliation.”
Joe Manchin stopped short of calling for a delay in reconciliation bill until 2022, but told me he wants leaders to slow things down.
"No," he said when I asked if he thinks the package should be punted until next year. Said Congress needs to have "good idea" about what's needed
Manchin added: “You know what I said? I said let's wait and see whatever we need. We need to have a good idea. The main thing is inflation, if it's transitory or not, you have a better idea, you know, once we get into it a little bit longer, but right now inflation is still high”
Manchin added: “And now we understand that natural gas prices are higher than they've ever been, in West Virginia too, and the people who end up paying the highest are the ones that can't afford it. So we got to worry about all these things."