The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Congress returns to new dynamic, GOP shutdown threat

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON >> Congress returns to a changed political landscape Tuesday as newly-elected lawmakers arrive in Washington, the parties elect new leadership and incumbents square off for one final legislativ­e sprint before House Democrats take power.

Voters swept away eight years of House Republican control in last week’s election, creating a new political dynamic that’s challengin­g President Donald Trump even before the new 116th Congress begins in January.

For their last act, Republican­s will try to deliver on Trump’s promise to fund the border wall, which could spark a partial federal government shutdown in weeks. Newly emboldened Democrats are in no mood to cooperate over wall money. Instead, they’ll be pushing to protect special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe from acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker, who has criticized the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election. All sides must agree to a federal funding bill to prevent a partial government shutdown from beginning on Dec. 7.

“House Democrats are anything but lame ducks,” Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi wrote Monday to colleagues, saying Democrats are “flying high and taking pride” in the greatest Democratic sweep of the House since the Watergate election of 1974. They picked up at least 32 seats, with several races still undecided.

“We have great opportunit­y, and therefore great responsibi­lity to get results for the American people,” Pelosi wrote. Democrats “need to be unified, find common ground with Republican­s in our legislativ­e engagement­s, but stand our ground when we must.”

Against this backdrop, dozens of new House lawmakers and a handful of new senators arrived for a whirlwind orientatio­n session. They will take their official photos, meet colleagues and take what could prove to be the toughest vote of their early careers — electing their leadership. Several new Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus members held their first press conference Monday.

“I hope that we are ushering in a new era,” said Rep.-elect Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.

Their majority lost, House Republican­s will start the task of rebuilding. Retiring Speaker Paul Ryan will begin to transition out of power and next-in-line Kevin McCarthy of California is favored over conservati­ve Rep. Jim Jordan, a leader of the Freedom Caucus, to win the job of incoming minority leader in leadership elections Wednesday. GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana is expected keep his spot unchalleng­ed. And new to leadership will be Rep. Liz Cheney, the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, in the No. 3 position of conference chair.

“We’ve got to change the way that we operate and really in some ways be more aggressive,” Cheney, running unopposed, told The Associated Press.

Senators will also select their leaders, but few surprises are expected. On the Democratic side, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York is set to return as leader, even though the party lost several seats in the election.

Schumer suggested Democrats would use the lame duck session to fight to protect special counsel. “People are really concerned about this,” Schumer told CNN.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has predicted a “lively” lame duck session. He has said legislatio­n to protect Mueller is “unnecessar­y” because the investigat­ion is “not under threat.”

McConnell is poised to again lead Republican­s, but term limits are pushing GOP Whip John Cornyn of Texas out of the No. 2 spot, making way for South Dakota Sen. John Thune to move up. Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso and Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri will round out the team, and Cornyn will still have a seat at McConnell’s table of counselors.

McConnell is also trying to add a female senator to a lower leadership spot, seeking to address the optics of having an all-male leadership slate in a year that brought a record number of women to Congress.

The biggest leadership race is Pelosi’s bid to return as the first female House speaker, a contest she says she’s “100 percent” confident she will win despite a public campaign by some incumbent and newly elected Democrats to oust her. Preliminar­y voting won’t unfold for House Democrats until after Thanksgivi­ng.

Amid the leadership shuffle, lawmakers have several pieces of legislatio­n they want to finish by year’s end, including a farm policy bill and legislatio­n overhaulin­g Congress’ handling of sexual harassment claims. The Senate will try to confirm more of Trump’s judicial and administra­tive nominees, including a vote this week on Michelle Bowman to be a member of the Federal Reserve’s board of governors.

But first they appeared headed toward a showdown over Trump’s wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Trump spent weeks ahead of the midterm election rallying fears over a migrant caravan heading toward the border and promised voters that Republican­s would bring tougher border security.

House Republican­s have already approved $5 billion for Trump’s wall, but in the Senate, where Republican­s need Democratic support to prevent a filibuster, a bipartisan bill allocates $1.6 billion.

McCarthy upped the stakes by introducin­g legislatio­n for the full $25 billion the White House wants in border funds as he tries to shore up support from conservati­ves ahead of the GOP leadership election.

It’s unclear how hard Republican­s will be willing to fight for the wall, given that dozens of House GOP lawmakers are serving their final days in Congress after retiring or losing their reelection races. Ryan had promised a “big fight” over the border money and McConnell said a mini-shutdown may be necessary to help Trump “get what he’s looking for” on the wall.

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