Good afternoon, OnPolitics readers!
The government shutdown showdown on the Hill continues today. The House is expected to vote on a temporary spending bill that would prevent a partial government shutdown starting this weekend.
But it’s not over yet.
If the bill is approved by the House, it would still need to clear the Senate, where 15 Republican senators are threatening to delay the bill.
Why the hold up? They want language included in the bill that would prevent the use of federal money to carry out a Biden administration mandate on workplace vaccinations.
In other House news: The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection has interviewed 250 people and plans weeks of hearings next year about what lawmakers have found.
The cooperation has come despite the high-profile defiance by witnesses such as former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark and former President Donald Trump’s political strategist Steve Bannon.
It’s Amy and Mabinty with the top stories out of Washington.
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Tighter travel rules, free at-home tests and booster shots are key elements of President Joe Biden’s latest strategy to combat the rapidly evolving coronavirus.
the controversial, Trump-era program.
Symone Sanders, Vice President Kamala Harris’ chief spokesperson and senior adviser, is leaving the White House at the end of the year, according to an administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the announcement.
It’s been a rough fall for Harris: The announcement follows a string of media reports of turmoil within the vice president’s office and tension between Harris and the West Wing. White House officials and Harris have disputed those claims, but Sanders’ exit marks the second departure from the vice president’s office within weeks.
date is rare. Dec. 2, 2021, written out numerically as 12/02/2021, is a palindrome because it reads the same backward as it does forward. — Amy and Mabinty
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