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Good evening and welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. Both Democrats and Republicans are dealing with internal dissent as Congress settles uncomfortably into the lame duck period ahead of Donald Trump’s return to Washington. Real legislative action is unlikely, but there’s a lot happening behind the scenes, both at the leadership level and on the Senate committees where the fate of Trump’s cabinet nominees will be determined. More on the confirmation outlook for Pete Hegseth, R.F.K. Jr., Tulsi, Kash Patel, and more, below the fold.
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The Best & Brightest
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Good evening and welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. I’m Abby Livingston.

Both Democrats and Republicans are dealing with internal dissent as Congress settles uncomfortably into the lame duck period ahead of Donald Trump’s return to Washington. Real legislative action is unlikely, but there’s a lot happening behind the scenes, both at the leadership level and on the Senate committees where the fate of Trump’s cabinet nominees will be determined. More on the confirmation outlook for Pete Hegseth, R.F.K. Jr., Tulsi, Kash Patel, and more, below the fold.

But first…

  • Puck on Pardon-gate: Would Hunter Biden have ever been targeted, tried, and sentenced by the Justice Department if he weren’t Biden’s son? And was the president in any way justified in pardoning him? Peter Hamby and Tara Palmeri get into it in an especially feisty episode of The Powers That Be, our flagship daily podcast. Listen here.
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  • Eriq Gardner on Trump’s antitrust warning signs: Unless you’re a racing fan or Drive to Survive devotee, you may have missed that Formula 1 is adding an American team, Cadillac, sponsored by General Motors. This isn’t just a milestone for the rapidly growing sport; it seems to be the first inroad that Trump 2.0 has made on the antitrust front, while also signaling a significant media deal to come.

    Liberty Media, which owns F1, had previously blocked a proposed new team from Michael Andretti, sparking a Department of Justice investigation into possible antitrust violations, pushed by Republican lawmakers including Reps. John James and Jim Jordan. Now the air seems to have cleared: The Cadillac team will be operated by execs tied to Andretti’s camp, if not the former racing legend himself.

    Liberty’s newfound flexibility likely has something to do with the election of Donald Trump. The Andretti family is close with Don Jr., for starters, and sources tell me that Liberty chairman John Malone wants to clear potential regulatory obstacles as he explores a sale of the company, which also has sizable stakes in Live Nation and SiriusXM. Making nice with the D.O.J. is a smart play. Meanwhile, Liberty C.E.O. Greg Maffei—instrumental in the company’s 2017 acquisition of F1 and regarded as the staunchest opponent to Andretti’s team—is leaving.

    The F1 shake-up comes as Michael Jordan’s NASCAR team fights over that circuit’s closed charter system. The NBA Hall of Famer, who has powerhouse sports antitrust attorney Jeffrey Kessler leading the charge, was recently denied a preliminary injunction. But I wouldn’t be surprised to see the feds take a closer look at exclusionary practices across the sports and media landscape. Having ties to Trump’s inner circle might just offer a competitive edge. —Eriq Gardner

And now on to the main event: the confirmation questions that have engulfed the town…
Hegseth Senate-ology 101
Hegseth Senate-ology 101
The fate of Trump’s most crucial cabinet confirmations will be decided by a handful of Republican Senators, all of whom are playing a game of political Jenga. How much each has to lose, if anything, could be the deciding factor.
ABBY LIVINGSTON ABBY LIVINGSTON
It’s no secret that four of Donald Trump’s cabinet nominees—Pete Hegseth at the Pentagon, Kash Patel at the F.B.I., Tulsi Gabbard as D.N.I., and R.F.K. Jr. at H.H.S.—face uncertain futures on the Hill. Indeed, almost everyone is wondering whether Senate Republicans will reject their troubled nominations or whether they’ll sail through, but some early signs are emerging. In recent days, for example, a cascade of Senate Republicans have come out in support of Hegseth, despite a blistering account in The New Yorker of his drunken antics and financial mismanagement while running a pair of veterans nonprofits, NBC’s reporting on how Hegseth “drank in ways that concerned his coworkers” at Fox News, and an email from Hegseth’s own mother accusing him of “abuse” and “debasing” women.

Of course, in a 53-47 Senate, it would take only four Republican defections to sink any of Trump’s nominees. And in my conversations with close Senate observers, a few schools of thought are emerging about how Republican members will evaluate these nominees.

The first cohort is the potential rebels. Senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, who are invulnerable to primaries in Maine and Alaska, respectively, have the freedom to challenge Trump. Both women are keeping their cards close to the vest, but Collins intriguingly warned on Tuesday against letting Trump bypass the Senate’s advice and consent role in the Hegseth matter—perhaps a harbinger of her opposition. “That is why I do not want to see an attempt to have recess appointments,” she said. “It’s important that we thoroughly vet the nominees for these very important decisions.”

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The latest buzz is that Utah Senator-elect John Curtis may wind up joining this group. Utah voters, after all, gave Mitt Romney wide latitude in his dealings with Trump, and his successor might approach the job similarly. (Mormons hate a sloppy drunk.) It might also be worth keeping an eye on Todd Young, the second-term Hoosier and defense hawk. Young is an acolyte of the late John McCain, who delivered Trump his first major legislative setback: sinking the Obamacare repeal.

Meanwhile, Lindsey Graham sits in a camp we’ll call “the specialists.” On Tuesday afternoon, he was noncommittal on Hegseth’s nomination, telling CBS News: “I think some of these articles are very disturbing. He obviously has a chance to defend himself here, but some of this stuff is, it’s going to be difficult.” Sure, Graham almost always ends up falling in line with Trump, but the fact that he wasn’t reflexively all-in for Hegseth illustrates a theory in circulation: Senators who serve on specific committees might hesitate to support a problematic nominee in their jurisdiction.

Graham, for instance, previously served on the Armed Services Committee for most of his 30 years in Congress—in both the House and the Senate—and he’s also a veteran. Joni Ernst, another veteran and longtime Armed Services member—and a survivor of sexual assault—told the press on Tuesday that she will have a “really frank and thorough” conversation with Hegseth about his reported behavior. So while senators might peel off on the nominee relevant to their committee assignments or past life experiences—law enforcement, medicine, etcetera—they may back nominees for departments outside of their policy specializations. The committees to watch are Judiciary (for Patel), Intel (for Gabbard), H.H.S. (for R.F.K. Jr.), and Armed Services (for Hegseth).

Assuming Trump decides against running for a third term (which, of course, he is constitutionally barred from doing), the Class II senators, whose terms expire in 2027, will be the last group up for reelection before Trump fully becomes a lame duck. That makes them an intriguing lot to observe: It’s the largest Republican class grouping, with 20 members in all. They’ll be the first up for reelection, in 2026, and likely the first to face Trump’s wrath—including via possible Trump-backed primary challengers—for any acts of defiance. Within this grouping, the members to watch are North Carolina’s Thom Tillis and Collins (again), since they may also face competitive general elections.

Finally, there is the YOLO caucus of senators—those who may retire at the end of their current terms. Going rogue on confirmations will likely be the tell. The most watched senator in this category is, of course, Mitch McConnell, who hasn’t actually said whether he’s retiring. I’m not hearing any specific names, but there is a sense that a senator or two might quickly get their fill of the latest round of Trump drama and decide to hang it up.

But in reality, Trump will probably mostly get his way in staffing the executive branch. Even with these possible waverers, it’s hard to see the Senate issuing many rejections at the cabinet level, let alone for the lower-tier nominees who will most likely also be like-minded Trump loyalists.

Musical Chairmanships
In the wake of November’s presidential loss, House Democrats have entered a period of generational upheaval. On Monday, 76-year-old Raúl Grijalva announced he would step down as the party’s ranking member on the Natural Resources Committee; 77-year-old Jerry Nadler faces a serious challenge from the charismatic Jamie Raskin to lead Dems on Judiciary; and 79-year-old David Scott’s party leadership on the Agriculture Committee may also be in jeopardy—even as Farm Bill deliberations grow more urgent by the day.

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As I wrote on Sunday, this all came on very suddenly. Democrats’ primary concern is the stewardship of the committees. But a secondary frustration is political: Some Democratic committee leaders did very little to help the party try to reclaim the House majority. Both parties put expectations on their chairs and ranking members to bring in money to their campaign committees, with the implicit message being that the only way to get a chairman’s gavel is for the party to win control of the chamber. (To be clear: Nadler, for his part, did bring in money, and per party documents, campaigned hard for colleagues as well.) But according to the monthly D.C.C.C. dues sheet, many more-junior members have transferred multiple millions of dollars to the committee—including Jasmine Crockett, Robin Kelly, Raja Krishnamoorthi, Deborah Ross, and Haley Stevens. Much of this fundraising prowess and largesse toward the D-Trip comes from members who were elected in the post-2016 world of the Trumpified G.O.P. As these members move up in the party, we might see them using their increasingly powerful perches to further boost the committee’s receipts, and it seems reasonable to anticipate they may grow frustrated with the bottlenecking for top committee assignments.

Finally, there’s an important changing-of-the-guard coming on the Republican side of the House: Politico reported yesterday that Dan Conston will leave the Congressional Leadership Fund—the powerful super PAC aligned with House Republican leadership. Conston is a key House Republican operative who’s spent his career specializing in House races, and he has few peers when it comes to institutional memory. He was also a major cog in Kevin McCarthy’s political machine. Because of the G.O.P.’s hard-money fundraising deficiencies in 2024 (given the results this cycle, it’s gone underappreciated that House Republican candidates shat the bed in fundraising vs. their Democratic counterparts), Conston’s super PAC carried a much heavier load in buying TV time than had previous iterations of the C.L.F.

Yes, the G.O.P. is on track to lose, in aggregate, a seat or two this cycle. But Conston and the C.L.F. were a major reason Republicans narrowly held on to the House majority. Replacing Conston will be one of the most consequential political decisions facing Mike Johnson and House leadership in the new term.

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