- by foxnews
- 05 Sep 2025
House and Senate lawmakers are returning to Washington from their home turfs to face a litany of critical battles in the coming weeks.
The House and Senate will overlap for just 14 days between Tuesday and the Sept. 30 government funding deadline, and no agreement has been reached yet on fiscal year (FY) 2026 spending priorities.
Democrats, unhappy with Republican efforts to rescind prior appropriated funds via the rescissions process, have signaled they're ready to play hardball.
A White House official told reporters on Friday they believe a clean CR, meaning without any changes or riders attached, would put Democrats in a difficult position and that rejecting one would pin the blame for a shutdown on the left.
Republicans themselves will have precious little room for error, however. Two special elections in safe blue seats between now and Sept. 30 are poised to shrink the House GOP majority from three seats to two.
A bipartisan effort to force a House-wide vote on releasing the Department of Justice's (DOJ) records on Jeffrey Epstein is expected to move full-throttle this week, even as the DOJ has already agreed to hand a tranche of files over to the House Oversight Committee.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., publicly condemned the effort in July, dismissing discharge petitions as a tool of the minority party and asserting that all Republicans were in favor of transparency in Epstein's case.
Khanna told NBC News' "Meet The Press" over the weekend that the petition would go live on Sept. 2, and that he and Massie have more than enough commitments to force a vote.
Trump federalized the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) last month as part of a wider effort to crack down on crime in the capital city. Under D.C.'s Home Rule Act, his authority over the local police can last 30 days unless Congress passes a joint resolution to extend it.
The president suggested in August, however, that he could bypass Congress on the issue if he declared a national emergency - a move that some Republicans are already on board with. Additionally, Trump's deployment of federal troops into the District does not have a statutory end date.
It's not clear yet which route will be taken, but a leadership aide told Fox News Digital last month that House leaders were working with the White House on a package of legislation addressing D.C. crime.
Currently, Trump has 145 nominees scheduled on the executive calendar with more expected to make their way through committee as lawmakers continue their workflow.
And Republicans are willing to go nuclear on Senate Democrats to get their nominees through. That would mean unilaterally changing the rules in the upper chamber without Democrats weighing in.
The Senate GOP is set to meet this week to discuss the proposed rule changes, which could include shortening the debate time for certain nominees, bundling nominees together into a package or skipping the cloture vote on some nominees altogether.
Italian officials announced the discovery of three ancient "fairy house" tombs on Sardinia, containing Roman-era artifacts and dating to the late Neolithic period.
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