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Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, speaking after meeting President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to discuss a coronavirus relief package, in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 1, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Sen. Collins on Biden meeting: It was a very good exchange of views
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Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, speaking after meeting President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to discuss a coronavirus relief package, in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 1, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
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Senate Democrats will unveil their budget resolution tomorrow

Following the House’s unveiling of their own budget resolution this afternoon, Democrats in the Senate will unveil their budget resolution tomorrow.

A memo being circulated by the Senate Budget Committee tonight lays out the framework and rational for Democrats beginning their budget reconciliation process, a procedural tool that will allow them to pass President Biden’s Covid relief plan with a simple majority.

The memo comes after a group of Senate Republicans met in the Oval Office with Biden for more than an hour.

The resolution outlined provides Senate Committees with nearly $1.9 billion to use to craft a Covid relief bill. Senate Budget will direct 11 Senate Committees to begin working on the bill including:

  • Agriculture
  • Finance
  • Banking
  • HELP
  • Commerce
  • EPW                       
  • Homeland Security
  • Indian Affairs
  • Foreign Relations
  • Veterans
  • Small Business

The Budget Committee plans to stay very close to what Biden proposed, promising to try and raise the minimum wage to $15 using reconciliation, expanding testing and tracing, vaccine distribution, providing more money for SNAP, funding for schools and providing direct $1,400 checks to individuals.

“The American people want us to act boldly and they want us to act now. Instead of listening to wealthy campaign contributors, it is time for the Senate to listen to the needs of working families, the elderly, the sick, the disabled and the poor. And that is exactly what this Budget Resolution will accomplish,” the memo says.

No stimulus deal reached with White House, GOP senators say

Republican senators who met with President Biden today in the Oval Office emerged from the meeting saying no Covid-19 stimulus deal had been reached, but offered hope that an agreement could be on the horizon.

GOP Sens. Collins, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah and Rob Portman of Ohio were among the senators who met with Biden today discuss their stimulus plan which places greater emphasis on the health effects of the crisis, including expanding funds for a vaccine rollout.

It limits direct payments to Americans and does not include assistance to states and localities, which Democrats have insisted upon as part of any relief measure.

Collins said the senators are “very appreciative” that in Biden’s “first official meeting in the Oval Office,” he chose to “spend so much time with us in a frank and very useful discussion.”

“It was an excellent meeting,” said Collins. “…I am hopeful that we can once again, pass a sixth bipartisan Covid relief package.”

Here’s a look at the key differences between Biden’s proposal and the GOP plan.

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GOP Sen. Collins calls Biden meeting on Covid relief "a very good exchange of views"

Republican senators who met with President Biden today in the Oval Office spoke to the press from the White House driveway stakeout following the meeting.

Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins said the group of GOP senators had a “very productive, cordial two hour meeting with the President and Vice President” to “discuss the next steps on the Covid relief package.”

In comparison to Biden’s proposal, the GOP plan places more emphasis on the health effects of the crisis, including expanding funds for a vaccine rollout. It limits direct payments to Americans and does not include assistance to states and localities, which Democrats have insisted upon as part of any relief measure.

The lawmakers, including Collins, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah and Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, told Biden in a letter that they devised the plan “in the spirit of bipartisanship and unity” that the President has urged.

Nine of the GOP senators who signed the letter attended today’s White House meeting in person, and Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota participated in the meeting over the phone, according to the pool. 

More on today’s meeting: The chances that Biden’s meeting with the 10 Republican senators changes the final trajectory of Biden’s  $1.9 trillion package are slim.

But the effort underscores the tension Biden is facing between the Washington he once knew as a US senator and the one he is returning to as President. Biden is taking the meeting, and in many ways, there is no other choice for a President who built his campaign on uniting the country and compromise.

Biden’s team — and Biden himself — have made it clear that they can be flexible in some places, but the roughly $600 billion Republican plan is a drop in the bucket compared to where they want to go. 

These are some of the differences in the Biden and GOP stimulus proposals

President Biden and a group of 10 Republican senators have very different ideas for the next coronavirus relief bill.

The President outlined a $1.9 trillion package last month that included a wide range of immediate assistance for struggling families, such as $1,400 stimulus checks and extended unemployment, nutrition and eviction aid, and longer-term changes, such as a $15 hourly minimum wage.

But the measure immediately ran into resistance from Republicans on Capitol Hill. In response, a group of 10 senators on Sunday released their own roughly $618 billion relief proposal – less than one-third the size of the President’s. They provided a chart detailing the cost of their plan on Monday morning.

Here are some of the key differences:

Stimulus payments:

  • Biden’s plan plan calls for sending another $1,400 per person to eligible recipients. This money would be in addition to the $600 payments that were approved by Congress in December – for a total of $2,000.
  • GOP senators want to send $1,000 checks, per adult, but target them to those with lower incomes. The amount would begin phasing out at $40,000 for individuals and $80,000 for couples filing jointly. The upper cap would be $50,000 for individuals and $100,000 for couples. Dependent adults and children would receive $500.

Unemployment Benefits:

  • Biden’s plan would increase the federal boost the jobless receive to $400 a week, from the $300 weekly enhancement contained in Congress’ relief package from December. He would also extend the payments, along with two key pandemic unemployment programs, through September. 
  • The GOP proposal would extend the $300 a week benefit through June 30. It would also provide $2 billion to states to improve their technology.

Covid-19 vaccines, testing and tracing:

  • The President’s plan calls for investing $20 billion in a national vaccination program, including launching community vaccination centers around the country and mobile units in hard-to-reach areas. Biden would also increase federal support to vaccinate Medicaid enrollees. The proposal would also invest $50 billion in testing, providing funds to purchase rapid tests, expand lab capacity and help schools implement regular testing to support reopening. It would also fund the hiring of 100,000 public health workers, nearly tripling the community health workforce.
  • The Republicans’ proposal calls for providing the same amount to battle the pandemic. It would fund a National Vaccine Program, expansion of testing, a disaster relief fund and personal protective equipment for first responders, independent physician offices and dentists. It would also provide $15 billion to replenish the National Strategic Stockpile and inject $35 billion to the provider relief fund, which reimburses hospitals and health care providers for coronavirus-related expenses and revenue losses.

School reopening:

  • The President would provide an additional $170 billion to K-12 schools, colleges and universities to help them reopen and operate safely or to facilitate remote learning. Congress approved $82 billion in aid for schools in December.
  • The Republicans would provide $20 billion for getting K-12 students back to school.

The senators are scheduled to meet with Biden on Monday afternoon to discuss their plan. You can read more details about both plans here.

Happening now: Biden meets with GOP senators to discuss Covid relief

President Biden is meeting now in the Oval Office with a group of Republican senators who have proposed a drastically slimmer coronavirus relief package than the $1.9 trillion measure he is offering.

The White House meeting with the 10 GOP senators, led by moderate Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, is Biden’s first publicly disclosed Oval Office session with lawmakers since taking office last month.

Biden, with Vice President Kamala Harris sitting on his right side, thanked everyone for coming down to the White House and said he was anxious to talk. He joked that he felt like he was back in the Senate which he liked the best of anything he’s done.

Reporters were ushered out of the Oval Office and Biden did not respond to a shouted question about when he wants to see movement on the stimulus package.

The other invited participants in the meeting are GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rob Portman of Ohio, Todd Young of Indiana, Jerry Moran of Kansas, Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

The Republicans’ plan places more emphasis on the health effects of the crisis, including expanding funds for a vaccine rollout. It limits direct payments to Americans and does not include assistance to states and localities, which Democrats have insisted upon as part of any relief measure.

According to a summary of the plan obtained by CNN, it is estimated to cost $618 billion. The GOP proposal also includes:

  • $160 billion for vaccines, testing and treatment for coronavirus
  • $4 billion for behavioral health and substance abuse treatment
  • $50 billion for small businesses
  • $132 billion for unemployment insurance through June
  • $220 billion in additional direct payments
  • $20 billion for child care
  • $20 billion for schools

One thing it does not include: state and local funding that is a must-have for Democrats.

Some more background: The Biden administration is facing a crucial test this week. In addition to the President’s meeting, Democrats are beginning the reconciliation process to potentially pass legislation on their own, which could potentially poison the well for a bipartisan deal.

Many Democrats in Congress believe entertaining Republican counteroffers is merely putting off the inevitable, and would like Biden to proceed quickly to using reconciliation to pass a bill with only a 51-vote majority.

Budget reconciliation is a rare procedural tactic that can be used to advance bills in the Senate with a simple majority rather than the 60 vote threshold that is typically required for breaking filibusters and moving legislation forward.

In the current Senate, Democrats control 50 seats along with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote. As a result, the party can pass a range of budget reconciliation bills with their slim 51 vote majority.

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Leading Senate Democrat calls for a confirmation hearing for Biden's pick for attorney general

Incoming Senate Judiciary Chair Majority Whip Dick Durbin asked GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, the current Senate Judiciary chair, to proceed to a confirmation hearing for President Biden’s Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland on Feb. 8.

 He added that, “to delay Judge Garland’s hearing jeopardizes our national security.”

Graham is still the chair of the committee until the new Senate organizing resolution is passed.

More Trump attorneys could be added before his impeachment trial starts

A Trump adviser said more attorneys may be added to the former president’s legal team in the coming days before his impeachment trial starts.

The adviser said there is no timetable on making that announcement yet.

A separate adviser said Donald Trump is still obsessed with the false conspiracy theory that the election was stolen from him.

A GOP congressional source said many Republicans in the Senate would rather Trump steer clear of his election lies. “Especially after January 6th,” the source said.

Some background: Trump’s office announced that David Schoen and Bruce L. Castor, Jr. will now head the legal team for his second impeachment trial, a day after CNN first reported that five members of his defense left and his team effectively collapsed.

One point of friction with his previous team was Trump wanted the attorneys to focus on his election fraud claims rather than the constitutionality of convicting a former president.

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Pamela Brown and Katelyn Polantz contributed reporting to this post. 

It would be a "disservice" to Trump's legal effort to argue the election was stolen, top GOP senator says

Sen. John Cornyn, a member of the Senate GOP leadership, told CNN it would be a “disservice” for former President Donald Trump’s legal team to focus on Trump’s baseless claim that the election was “stolen.”

Asked how an argument about the election being stolen would affect his thinking, Cornyn said: 

Cornyn was also asked about Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, and whether he thinks any action should be taken against her. He said: “I’m only vaguely familiar with what she’s been saying and doing and I leave that up to our House colleagues. They usually don’t like advice from senators.”

Told that senators still often give advice to the House, Cornyn said with a laugh: “I’m showing some great restraint.” And he got into an elevator.

Greene, a freshman from Georgia, repeatedly indicated support for executing prominent Democratic politicians in 2018 and 2019 before being elected to Congress, a CNN KFile review of hundreds of posts and comments from Greene’s Facebook page shows.

Biden's acting solicitor general asks Supreme Court to delay case over border wall funding

President Biden’s acting solicitor general asked the Supreme Court on Monday to remove a significant case concerning funding for former President Donald Trump’s border wall from the court’s calendar citing Biden’s recent proclamation barring American taxpayer dollars from being diverted to construct a border wall. 

The justices were scheduled to hear arguments in the case on Feb. 22. 

In the latest filing from acting Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, the government told the justices that Biden has directed a “pause in construction” so that the government can undertake an assessment “of the legality of the funding and contracting methods used to construct the wall.” 

Lawyers for the ACLU praised the filing. 

Schumer says Democrats welcome GOP ideas but "cannot accept" a package that is "too small or too narrow"

Hours before a group of GOP senators will meet with President Biden on coronavirus relief, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer reiterated that Democrats welcome the ideas of Republicans — but they “cannot accept” any package “that is too small or too narrow to pull our country out of this emergency.”

“Our history is full of warnings of the cost of small thinking during times of great challenge,” he added, again pointing to Congress’ “slow” and “timid” response to the 2009 financial crisis.

Schumer noted the announcement that he and Speaker Pelosi filed a joint budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2021, saying it’s “the first step in giving Congress an additional legislative tool to quickly pass the Covid relief legislation.” This week, he said, the Senate will begin crafting legislation to rescue Americans and the hurting economy.   

On President Biden’s cabinet — Schumer said Biden’s pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas’ confirmation vote will now happen Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. ET, due to winter storms impacting senators travel. He added that Biden’s nominee for Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg will get a confirmation vote also on Tuesday at noon ET.

At the top of his remarks he also addressed the coup in Myanmar, saying Congress stands ready to work collaboratively with the new administration to resolve the situation.

Congressional Democrats take first step toward Covid-19 relief funding through reconciliation 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer are taking the first step toward reconciliation to push through Covid-19 relief funding.  

What this means: This is the first step in a legislative process that will give the party the chance to circumvent Republicans and pass Biden’s Covid relief bill with just Democratic votes.

The reconciliation process was set up as part of the 1974 Congressional Budget Act to make it faster and easier to pass legislation related to spending, taxes, and debt, because debate on the bills is limited to 20 hours and can be passed on a majority vote. 

Legislation that does not fall under reconciliation is routinely blocked by the minority party through the filibuster, which requires 60 votes to overcome. 

Biden administration debating internally on use of "coup" in respect to situation in Myanmar

The Biden administration is having an internal debate over whether or not to call the military takeover in Myanmar a coup, according to a State Department official and an administration official.

Officially declaring it a coup, which the administration has not yet done in any of their statements on the matter, would legally bind the US to cut off foreign assistance to the country. The State Department legal office is studying this determination and is likely to take the lead on this matter, the officials said. 

There is no legal requirement for the US to formally declare a military takeover to be a coup or not, but the administration will make that determination if they see it in the US national security interest to do so. 

President Biden said in a statement on Monday that the military seizing power and detaining Aung San Suu Kyi over the weekend was a “direct assault on the country’s transition to democracy and rule of law” and that it will “necessitate an immediate review of our sanction laws and authorities, followed by appropriate action.”

An interagency National Security Council deputy committee meeting will convene on Myanmar this afternoon and officials are expected to discuss sanctions they could use to respond to the military takeover, two State Department officials said.

The Biden administration could roll out sanctions as soon as this week, but their decision to pull the trigger will likely be impacted by a thirst to move alongside allies. They are working to get a sense of how quickly other countries want to move alongside them, the officials said. 

The State Department did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

House Democrats to accuse Trump of intentionally inciting rioters with months-long campaign to subvert voters

House impeachment managers are preparing a case for next week’s Senate impeachment trial to detail how former President Trump acted intentionally in a months-long effort to subvert the will of the voters that incited the Jan. 6 US Capitol riots, as well as the constitutionality for convicting Trump after he’s left office, sources familiar with the matter tell CNN.

The House’s pre-trial impeachment brief on Tuesday will lay the legal groundwork for a case in which the managers plan to illustrate the horrors of the January 6 attack on the Capitol in visceral detail and tie the carnage back to Trump’s words and actions, sources say. 

The House impeachment team plans to show how Trump’s incitement of the rioters on Jan. 6 was an intentional effort months in the making. They intend to show how Trump repeatedly claimed that the election would be stolen from him before Nov. 3, then unleashed a flurry of disinformation as part of his “stop the steal” campaign to try to overturn the will election result and question the validity of President Biden’s win, which culminated in Trump’s actions on January 6 inciting the rioters that attacked the Capitol.

The House managers are expected provide a detailed legal analysis in their pre-trial legal brief, due at 10 a.m. ET Tuesday, about the constitutionality of charging Trump with incitement of insurrection, why he should be disqualified for holding future office and why it’s constitutional to convict Trump as a former President, in an effort to rebut what’s emerged as the primary reason Senate Republicans have cited to acquit Trump.

Trump’s legal team is also scheduled to file its response to the impeachment trial summons on Tuesday at 12 p.m. ET after five of Trump’s lawyers left his team on Saturday amid a dispute about legal strategy and whether to argue baseless claims of widespread election fraud. Trump hired two new lawyers, David Schoen and Bruce Castor, on Sunday, and his team is expected to argue that trying a former president is unconstitutional. 

More details on the trial: The House impeachment team is still considering whether to call witnesses as part of their case, one of the key looming questions that will dictate how long the trial will last. That effort is bumping up against a desire from both Democratic and Republican senators to quickly conclude the trial within a matter of days so the Senate can keep the Senate’s focus on taking up Covid relief legislation and confirming Biden’s nominees. 

The question of witnesses could ultimately be determined by whether there are any willing to step forward voluntarily – avoiding any delays over executive privilege – who can speak to Trump’s mindset in the hours leading up to the riots and as they were unfolding, when there were urgent requests coming from Capitol Hill to call in the National Guard to the Capitol.

The briefs due Tuesday are the first of several pre-trial responses that the House managers and Trump lawyers will file with the Senate ahead of the impeachment trial’s arguments, which are scheduled to begin on Feb. 9.

House Democrat calls on Biden to screen social media of military recruits for signs of violent extremism

Democratic Rep. Jackie Speier, who chairs the House Armed Services Military Personnel Subcommittee, called on President Biden to issue an executive order that would direct agencies to screen for violent extremism on social media for all incoming military recruits and those seeking government security clearances, according to a letter obtained by CNN.

The letter, which also requests Biden issue an executive order identifying white supremacy and violent extremism as a critical threat to national security, was sent to the White House, the Pentagon and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Friday.

“These platforms were crucial for planning the January 6, 2021, domestic terrorist attack upon the U.S. Capitol and the Congress of the United States. Yet social media is not reviewed during the military’s accessions process or even as part of the background investigation process for security clearances, despite collection and reporting of other intrusive, private data, such as financial and behavioral health information,” she added.

Some background: The letter comes after Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby told reporters last week that Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley have already discussed the issue of domestic extremism within the military.

During those conversations, both men “expressed their commitment to trying to get after it, to find the best way forward, to understand the scope of the problem inside the ranks and to better deal with the behavior, the conduct that is driven by extremist beliefs,” Kirby said.

In December, the Pentagon’s Personnel and Readiness Director was ordered to conduct a review of domestic extremism in the military. That ongoing review is due at the end of March that will come up with milestones “to be completed by mid-summer,” Kirby said.  

Security has been heightened and fences erected around the Capitol complex after a mob of Trump supporters broke through security barriers last month and entered the Capitol as Congress met to certify Biden’s win in the 2020 presidential election.

CNN’s Colin McCullough and Alanne Orjoux contributed reporting to this post.

GOP senators will speak to press after meeting Biden on Covid-19 relief 

Republican senators meeting with President Biden today will speak to the press afterwards at the White House driveway stakeout, according to Annie Clarke who is Sen. Susan Collins communications director.

They don’t know how long the 5:00 p.m. ET meeting will last but think it will be about an hour.

More on today’s meeting: The chances that Biden’s meeting with the 10 Republican senators changes the final trajectory of Biden’s  $1.9 trillion package are slim.

But the effort underscores the tension Biden is facing between the Washington he once knew as a US senator and the one he is returning to as President. Biden is taking the meeting, and in many ways, there is no other choice for a President who built his campaign on uniting the country and compromise.

Biden’s team — and Biden himself — have made it clear that they can be flexible in some places, but the roughly $600 billion Republican plan is a drop in the bucket compared to where they want to go. 

You might hear the word "reconciliation" a lot this week. Here's a brief explainer. 

Congressional Democrats could move as soon as this week to unlock the first step in a legislative process that will give the party the chance to circumvent Republicans and pass President Biden’s Covid relief bill with just Democratic votes.

The bill, which would be the first major piece of legislation of Biden’s presidency, is considered urgent for Democrats as it seeks to tackle the health and economic impact of the pandemic as well as cement long-time policy goals for progressives like raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour. 

Democrats who control the House and Senate by slim majorities are hoping to pass a budget resolution over the next few days, the first in a two-step process that would allow them to begin the work of writing the coronavirus relief bill in committees. The budget vote now would clear the way for Democrats to potentially pass their relief bill by late February or March after the impeachment trial of former President Trump is completed in the Senate.

While a schedule has not been announced yet, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that the House would pass the budget resolution first and then send its version to the Senate. If the Senate amends it, the House would have to pass it again before the committees could begin work on the reconciliation instructions.

Here are key things to know about the process:

  • The reconciliation process was set up as part of the 1974 Congressional Budget Act to make it faster and easier to pass legislation related to spending, taxes, and debt, because debate on the bills is limited to 20 hours and can be passed on a majority vote. Legislation that does not fall under reconciliation is routinely blocked by the minority party through the filibuster, which requires 60 votes to overcome.  
  • Using reconciliation, Democrats could fast track key aspects of Biden’s agenda from Covid relief to infrastructure, but the process comes with a strict set of rules attached. For example, Democrats are planning to try to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour in the stimulus package, but it might not survive the strict scrutiny reconciliation bills get from the Senate parliamentarian to decide if all aspects of the measure have a real impact on the country’s budget.
  • Reconciliation bills are bound by many rules that constrain how they can be used, which limit the ability of lawmakers to add unrelated and extraneous provisions. As the committees write their bills, they will try to ensure their proposals will be approved by Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough who must enforce the Byrd rule, a multi-pronged test designed to keep out provisions considered extraneous, without any real impact on the budget, or that might affect Social Security.
  • It is named for the late former Sen. Robert Byrd, a Democrat of West Virginia, who decried reconciliation bills for being loaded up with provisions considered far afield from their original purpose. In more colorful Senate jargon, provisions being scrubbed by the parliamentarian are undergoing a “Byrd bath.” When they don’t pass muster with her and are removed from the bill, they are called “Byrd droppings.”
  • Senators can challenge the Parliamentarian’s decisions and vote to waive the Byrd Rule, but they will need a 60 vote supermajority to do it.

Embedded in the budget resolution will be reconciliation instructions for several committees to write legislation, which in this case would deal with different aspects of Biden’s Covid relief, including funds for vaccines production and distribution, unemployment insurance, stimulus checks and more.

On a separate track, many Democrats, emboldened by control of the White House, House and Senate for the first time in years, are clamoring to scrap the 60 vote threshold for breaking filibusters of legislation, but that is still under discussion.

"America's got to go to the higher number" on Covid relief says Republican governor

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said though he hasn’t been privileged enough to have seen either stimulus package, he says there is “a tremendous difference” between a $1.9 trillion and $600 billion aid package. 

Speaking during a news conference Monday, the Republican governor said,

Justice said frankly he is not in favor of either plan. “I’m surely not in favor of a bailout,” he said. “But I’m sure also not a believer that what we should try to do is just squeeze, squeeze, squeeze, squeeze, and get it down, get it down, get it down and then all of a sudden, realize that we really and truly we didn’t deliver the goods.”  

Justice said the people of his state are hurting because of the pandemic, and they need a lot of help, right now. “With the number of people in this country that were hurting, and are still hurting today, we will not be able – no matter what anybody says or does – we will not be able to fit the shoe perfectly. We won’t be able to do that,” Justice said.  

“And if we put too much in the shoe, to where really and truly, it’s way too big or a little bit too big… Well, we’re still walking, aren’t we?” 

“But if we don’t put enough in the shoe… there’s no way that you can get it on our feet, our toes are really cramped and everything, then people are still really hurting and they’re not able to walk.”

Justice said coronavirus has “been a cannonball to everybody” and the nation needs “a jumpstart.” 

“With the magnitude of the national debt and where it is now, to go a little bit more bold or significantly bold, versus absolutely the trying to fit our foot into a shoe that’s not big enough. I think you go bold,” he continued. 

“We went through months – months – that we didn’t get the stimulus package passed because the Democrats and Republicans were in a food fight in Washington. It was the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever seen in my life,” Justice said. 

“It was just plain awful,” he added. “It’s the very thing that I despise, beyond belief. And you’ll never get me to make a difference in my mind, between Republicans and Independents and Democrats and everything, because the number one responsibility that I have – and will always be this way – is to absolutely be a West Virginian, be an American, first and foremost.”

"We don't spend a lot of time thinking about ... Trump," White House says

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said White House staff don’t spend much time thinking about former President Donald Trump. 

Asked whether Trump’s absence from social media has made her job easier or made Covid relief negotiations easier with Republican members of Congress, Psaki said, “This may be hard to believe. We don’t spend a lot of time talking about or thinking about President Trump here – former President Trump, to be very clear.”

Psaki said she thought it would be more appropriate to ask Republican members of Congress whether Trump’s absence from publicly weighing in on what’s going on in Washington “gives them space.” 

“I can’t say we miss him on Twitter,” she added during Monday’s press briefing. 

Psaki wouldn’t say whether Biden supported the continued ban on Trump’s social media accounts. 

“I think that’s a decision made by Twitter. We’ve certainly spoken to, and he’s spoken to the need for social media platforms to continue to take steps to reduce hate speech, but we don’t have more for you on it than that,” Psaki said.

Biden threatens to review sanctions on Myanmar following coup

President Biden threatened to review sanctions on Myanmar after the military seized power and detained elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi over the weekend.

He called the situation a “direct assault on the country’s transition to democracy and the rule of law,” and called on the international community to “press the Burmese military to immediately relinquish the power they seized.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki was pressed on a section of the statement that says, “The United States is taking note of those who stand with the people of Burma in this difficult hour,” and asked whether the suggestion was a warning to China specifically.

Psaki wouldn’t directly address the question, but rather, said it was “a message to all countries in the region and countries who will be asked to respond or to consider what the appropriate response will be in reaction to the events.”

WATCH:

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White House moving forward with immigration executive actions tomorrow

The White House does not intend to reschedule planned executive actions and remarks on immigration set for tomorrow, despite a delay in confirming Department of Homeland Security Secretary nominee Alejandro Mayorkas.

The Mayorkas confirmation vote was postponed from Monday to Tuesday due to inclement weather. 

Though White House officials discussed having President Biden sign a round of immigration-related executive orders as soon as last Friday, it was pushed to this week, two officials previously told CNN.

President Biden is expected to sign executive orders that would address root causes of migration from Central America and rescind Trump-era policies. Biden is also expected to create a task force reuniting families that were separated at the US-Mexico border.

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