All posts tagged "chris van hollen"

'Plunged into chaos': Senate committee melts down over funding mess

Samantha Handler with Punchbowl News live-tweeted as the Senate Appropriations Committee "plunged into chaos" Thursday over budget markups on the Commerce, Justice, Science bill that includes funding for NASA and the new FBI headquarters.

In an article on the debacle, Handler, John Bresnahan, and Laura Weiss wrote, "The Senate Appropriations Committee often passes each of its 12 annual spending bills on a bipartisan basis. This is what makes the Senate the Senate — and not the House.

"Yet the Senate Appropriations panel has its first FY2026 markup this morning, and senators still don’t have a deal on what they want to spend this year. There’s also no sense that they’ll be able to reach one."

Handler posted on X that Sens. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Jerry Moran (R-KS) were "trying to figure out a way forward," and were "working on a compromise on the FBI issue." All the while, Republicans were changing their votes to no, with Democrats changing their votes to yes.

The result was "chaos," Handler wrote.

According to the article, the two sides "appear to have a tacit agreement on two bills – Agriculture and Legislative Branch – to spend slightly more than FY2025. This puts the Senate at odds with House Republicans and the White House, which are seeking tens of billions of dollars in cuts to non-defense discretionary spending, aka social programs," the report said.

"However, a third bill — Commerce-Justice-Science — has become a partisan battleground over where the FBI will eventually land after leaving the old J. Edgar Hoover Building.

Van Hollen claimed, “This is a bigger issue than just the FBI building," adding, "I do think this goes to the prerogatives of the committee, because it’s the FBI building today. It could be any other project tomorrow.”

Punchbowl News claimed that the back-and-forth bickering over the bill was a "good example" of why there's a very real chance that the federal government could shut down this fall."

Read the Punchbowl News article here.

Senators on both sides of the aisle reject Trump's 'devastating' new scheme

President Donald Trump wants to cut NASA's budget by 24%, but senators on both sides of the aisle claim that would have devastating consequences on the agency's ability to advance vital scientific research, Bloomberg reported.

In addition, the president is seeking to slash NASA's science portfolio funding "nearly in half" while canceling "dozens of science missions," the report stated.

But during an appropriations committee hearing this week, Republicans and Democrats alike dismissed Trump's cuts, and proposed their own $24.9 billion budget for 2026, which is "roughly" the same amount NASA received for 2025.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) told Bloomberg, "We rejected cuts that would have devastated NASA science by 47% and would have terminated 55 operating and planned missions." Instead, he said, "we provide $7.3 billion" to fund those measures.

"Senators also rejected the Trump administration’s call to cancel NASA’s giant Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion crew capsule, the centerpieces of the Artemis program to return humans to the moon," according to the report.

These proposed cancellations seem at odds with Trump's first-term moonshot goal where he directed "NASA to land humans on the moon within five years 'by any means necessary.'”

Now, in his desire to cut government "waste, fraud, and abuse," Trump's proposed budget is all for phasing out “the grossly expensive and delayed” SLS and Orion programs "after their third flights." But Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) made a provision in Trump's "big, beautiful" tax bill to provide an extra $4.1 billion so SLS could be used up through its fourth and fifth flights.

Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS) said the bipartisan bill "reflects an ambitious approach to space exploration, prioritizing the agency’s flagship program, Artemis, and rejecting premature termination of systems like SLS and Orion before commercial replacements are ready."

On Wednesday, Trump announced that he was appointing Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, a former Fox News host, to serve as Interim Administrator of NASA."

Read the full Bloomberg story here.

'Alarmed': Lawmakers reportedly flooded with calls demanding 'marooned' migrant's return

Voters who used a particular phone app had one major request for their representatives: Return Kilmar Abrego Garcia to his family in the United States, new data from a San Francisco nonprofit revealed.

Abrego Garcia has been held in El Salvador's notorious Terrorism Confinement Center prison ever since he was mistakenly deported without receiving due process through a court hearing. Last week, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) traveled to El Salvador to meet with Abrego Garcia and advocate for his release. Neither President Donald Trump nor Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele would commit to securing his return to the United States.

The app, called 5 Calls, provides information on hot-button issues, plus a suggested script for concerned constituents to use when they call their lawmakers.

5 Calls shared this week's data with journalist Adam Klasfeld's "All Rise News."

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The "top takeaway," according to Klasfeld's blog, is that "people are alarmed about Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland man grabbed from his car in front of his 5-year-old autistic child and marooned inside a dangerous prison in El Salvador."

The data showed that the 5 Calls prompt, "Bring Abrego Garcia Home and Stop Trump's Plan to Traffic Civilians to a Foreign Gulag," brought in 83,340 calls in just four days.

“That's a LOT of calls," said data visualizations expert Katie Dektar.

According to the data, not all calls reached their intended congressional targets. Dektar noted that she "scaled the data by state population using recent Census statistics to reveal which elected officials received high call volume proportionally to their constituents."

The office with the highest call volume regarding Abrego Garcia belonged to Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME). Collins's office "received the most calls per 1,000 people of any senator," according to "All Rise News."

Read the report here.

'Relishing the opportunity': Chuck Todd suggests deeper strategy behind fight over migrant

The fight over Maryland man Kilmar Abrego Garcia came down to "optics" for the Trump administration, Journalist Chuck Todd surmised Friday on CNN.

The only explanation for the administration's continued resistance to bring Abrego Garcia home from El Salvador, where he was mistakenly deported, is to give the MAGA base what they want to see, Todd said.

"Why, if they believe they have the law on their side, that they could deport [Abrego Garcia] somewhere else, that they've mistakenly done this — why are they so afraid of bringing him back, going into court and making their case?" Todd asked. "It's almost like they're relishing the opportunity to have this showdown."

Todd said it's a familiar pattern within the administration, "where, instead of doing something that you could do it under the umbrella of constitutional, whether we're talking about DOGE or something like this, it's almost like they're intentionally saying, 'No, let's have the showdown, because the fight is good politics for the base.' And it feels as if that's what all this is about, that if they have the optics right for the base, they don't care about the substance."

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Journalist Kara Swisher interjected, "It's an emphasis on show, right? Because it's playing for social media. It's playing for very quick, snackable bits. You can see how they're doing it. They want those pictures to come through — and then they coordinate with the president of El Salvador, who himself, is a showboat — essentially by saying, 'Oh, they're having margaritas at this hotel,' when, in fact, Kristi Noem has given us a lot of pictures of what that place looks like and her poses in font of those prisoners."

Swisher summed up, "It's about...winning the day versus the truth."

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) returned from meeting with Abrego Garcia in El Salvador Friday afternoon and claimed that the Salvadoran government set up the margaritas to manipulate the photo op.

Watch the video below via CNN.

CNN fact checker cuts Trump off as he launches into 'little biography' of jailed immigrant

President Donald Trump read "a little biography" of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from a slip of paper during an Oval Office meeting Monday, offering it as proof that the Maryland man was a criminal who deserved to be held in an El Salvadoran prison.

Trump was speaking about Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), who traveled to the Central American country this week to check on Abrego Garcia's condition. The president then asked press secretary Karoline Leavitt to retrieve a piece of paper from another room.

"If you would, Karoline, maybe go into the room and see if you can find that little slip. I wrote some things down," the president said.

As Trump was handed the paper, he continued, "So, you're talking about Abrego Garcia — Is that the one? Yeah — Is an illegal alien, MS-13 gang member, and foreign terrorist," Trump said. "This comes out of the State Department and very legitimate sources. I mean, I assume — I'm reading — I'm just giving you what they handed to me. But this was supposed to be certified stuff."

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Trump continued, claiming that two judges "affirmed" Garcia was a member of the violent MS-13 gang.

"When Garcia was originally arrested, he was wearing a sweatshirt with rolls of money pouring out and MS-13 gang symbols," Trump read. Trump also read from Abrego Garcia's wife's domestic violence protective order.

CNN cut into the press conference, with anchor Dana Bash introducing correspondent Priscilla Alvarez to "fact-check" the president.

"It's a lot more complicated than that," Bash said of Trump's list.

"I have reviewed the same things that I believe the president has reviewed based on how he described them," Alvarez said. "On the judges and MS-13 ties, what he's referring to, there is two rulings by immigration judges when [Abrego Garcia] was taken into custody by ICE and he had been asking for bond."

Alvarez said ICE told the judges that Abrego Garcia was tied with MS-13, but "the immigration judges in both of those rulings did not conclusively find that he was part of MS-13."

She continued, saying Trump "also mentioned the domestic violence petition by [Abrego Garcia's] wife in 2021. I have received a statement from his wife who says that that was a difficult time in their marriage, that no marriage is perfect and that they went to counseling after the fact."

Alvarez said that domestic violence complaints are "typically not provided to the public unless shared by the victim. This was something that was blasted out by the administration."

Watch the clip below via CNN.

'Lit a fire and threw it on a keg of gasoline': Senator 'regrets' voting for Trump nominee

Maryland lawmaker Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) said Wednesday that he regrets voting to confirm former Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) as secretary of state, especially now that Rubio is enthusiastically supporting Trump's proposal to take over Gaza and turn it into a resort.

Van Hollen told CNN's Phil Mattingly he was appalled that Trump pressed the Gaza issue in front of King Abdullah of Jordan on Tuesday.

"What the president has done is, he has lit a fire and thrown it on a keg of gasoline," Van Hollen said. "Because what's happening in Gaza, what's happening in the Middle East, is already a tinderbox. It's already on fire, and what he is doing is going to spread that fire. He has essentially called for what amounts to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza, the forced removal of two million Palestinians to other areas."

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Mattingly asked, "There are people in kind of the Trump orbit that you are never surprised when they immediately jump to support whatever the president says. I was reading what your colleagues, Republicans and Democrats, were saying in the chamber after that proposal, and Republican allies were very surprised, were very, I think, candid, at least in that moment, saying, 'This isn't really a thing that can work.' One who wasn't, though, was the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, who you served with in the U.S. Senate, who was on the committee with you. Are you surprised how quickly he got behind the proposal?"

"Look, I am," Van Hollen answered. "My one vote I cast for a member of the Trump cabinet was for now Secretary Rubio. I regret to say that I regret that vote, because, once installed in office, he is essentially abandoning the positions that he took here as a United States senator."

Van Hollen continued, "So, yes, I've been extremely disappointed in the actions of Secretary Rubio, including jumping on board on this insane wrong idea, which effectively is calling for ethnic cleansing in Gaza because the president said he would be willing to use the military to do it."

Watch the clip below via CNN or click the link.

'America will pay dearly for this stupid move': Senator rips Trump over voter 'betrayal'

Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) ripped into President Donald Trump for imposing sweeping tariffs against Canada, Mexico, and China that he claimed will cost American taxpayers dearly.

On MSNBC's Velshi Sunday, Van Hollen used the example of the billions of dollars Trump handed out to subsidize soy bean farmers hurting from his first term tariff actions.

"What happened was when Trump, in his first term, imposed those tariffs on some Chinese products, the reality was China's retaliatory tariffs prevented a lot of U.S. exports from from being — and we paid, the federal government, the federal taxpayer, the American people — ended up paying tens of billions of dollars in subsidies to big farmers. So, at the end of the day, it's the American taxpayer and American people who are going to pay and pay dearly for this stupid move," Van Hollen said.

The senator said Trump's strategy with this round of tariffs wasn't readily apparent.

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"I mean, take Canada for example. It's just not clear what the president's endgame is with Canada; there's not an immigration issue. There's not a big fentanyl issue with respect to Canada. So, the president is just using these so-called emergency powers to levy tariffs, but the price will be paid by the American people, and without a strategy behind it, this is just folly."

Van Hollen continued, "I'm in favor of strategic, targeted tariffs, right, to protect key sectors: semiconductors, steel. I mean, these are important sectors. But across-the-board tariffs are simply a tax hike on the American people. And they're going to be feeling it pretty soon because, you know, Trump promised exactly the opposite,"

"This is also a prelude to a big tax break that the president is planning for the wealthiest people. So, I can tell you, Elon Musk doesn't — he's not going to feel the impact of the price increases from these tariffs. And then he's going to get a huge tax break windfall. So, yeah, this is a betrayal of all the people that President Trump said he wanted to help."

Watch the clip above via MSNBC or at the link.

EXCLUSIVE: Congress raids presidential campaign fund in surprise reversal

Congress quietly drained hundreds of millions of dollars from a largely unused presidential campaign fund to provide a jolt of cash to the United States Secret Service and election security grants, Raw Story has confirmed.

The massive raid of the Presidential Election Campaign Fund was included late last week in Congress’ latest government funding package, which President Joe Biden signed into law.

Raw Story could not confirm which member, or members, of Congress are responsible for inserting language in the middle of the 1,012-page bill that tapped the fund to the tune of $375 million.

But the ramifications are clear: The Presidential Election Campaign Fund, which publicly funded White House aspirants’ campaigns from the 1970s to late 2000s, will now provide $320 million to the Secret Service and $55 million for election security grants as a part of the $1.2 trillion funding package that averted a partial government shutdown, according to a Raw Story review of legislation.

The $320 million will be directed to “operations and support” for the U.S. Secret Service, according to the legislation, which provided 11th-hour funding to major government departments through September.

RELATED ARTICLE: Unused government election fund brings in another $1.3 million

The Secret Service, which provides security for the president, vice president (and such candidates), along with foreign heads of state, can use the funds for a variety of purposes — from purchasing vehicles to overtime pay to travel accommodations. Former President Donald Trump, in particular, has refused to reimburse local law enforcement at his presidential campaign rallies, and the Secret Service has previously stated that it cannot reimburse municipal governments for these public safety costs because it hasn't received money from Congress to do so.

The Secret Service acknowledged questions sent by Raw Story, including those about how the agency would use its new funding windfall. But, it did not respond by the time of publication.

The $55 million designated for “election security grants” will be distributed to states within 45 days by the Election Assistance Commission to “improve the administration of elections for Federal office, including to enhance election technology and make election security improvements,” the bill said.

The Election Assistance Commission, a small federal agency that has faced threats by congressional Republicans to its very existence, has experienced drastically dwindling federal funds since 2018, according to Votebeat, who first reported on the use of the Presidential Election Campaign Fund for Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA) grants given to states.

Benjamin Hovland, chairman of the Election Assistance Commission told Raw Story that federal funding for HAVA grants was $380 million in fiscal year 2018, $425 million in fiscal year 2020, $75 million in fiscal years 2022 and 2023, and now $55 million for fiscal year 2024.

“When you look at that number, that's less than we've seen in recent years, but I think that one of the things that is important about it is that it shows continued federal investment into election security and election administration,” Hovland told Raw Story in a phone interview. “We regularly hear from election administrators about the need for additional federal funds and then we hear about the need for consistent federal funds.”

The grants have been used by states to update voting equipment, create cybersecurity training programs, enhance physical security “to protect our election officials from physical threats” and to combat artificial intelligence disinformation, Hovland said.

The latest balance of the Presidential Election Campaign Fund was just over $404 million as of Feb. 28, according to figures from the U.S. Treasury. The Federal Election Commission has not approved matching funds for any 2024 presidential candidates, said Myles Martin, a spokesperson for the Federal Election Commission.

“The Commission will continue to evaluate submissions for either primary matching funds or general election funding for candidates who choose to apply for them, as well as continue to provide updates on the balance of the fund, which are received on a monthly basis from the Department of the Treasury,” Martin said.

The United States Treasury did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment. The Treasury’s Bureau of the Fiscal Services acknowledged Raw Story’s questions but did not respond by the time of publication.

‘Modernized, not gutted’

Thank then-candidate Barack Obama for effectively rendering the Presidential Election Campaign Fund obsolete when he opted out of using it during the 2008 presidential election.

While the fund showered presidential candidates with public money, it also placed restrictions on how much they could raise overall — restrictions that Obama initially said he’d accept before changing his mind.

Obama’s Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, accepted money from the fund. He was the last major party presidential nominee to do so.

Sen. John McCain was the last major presidential candidate to take public matching funds from the Presidential Election Campaign Fund. (AFP Photo/Chip Somodevilla)

Since then, presidential candidates of any stature have largely declined public funding for their campaigns, whether during presidential primaries or general elections.

This is due in large part to the general loosening of campaign finance restriction during the past 15 years, including the Supreme Court’s 2010 ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which allowed corporations, unions and certain nonprofits to raise and spend unlimited amounts of money to advocate for or against candidates. It also gave rise to super PACs — political committees that may do the same.

The lack of use caused the Presidential Election Campaign Fund to balloon to $445.6 million last year.

For years, members of Congress, nonprofits and government watchdogs have called for campaign funding reform or reallocation of the Presidential Election Campaign Fund, which is fueled by cash from Americans selecting a voluntary $3 check-off box on their annual federal income tax forms.

The Presidential Election Campaign Fund had been “rotting on the vine due to the failure to update both the amounts and the timing of the grants” for at least a decade, said Ian Vandewalker, senior counsel for the Brennan Center’s Elections and Government Program.

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“Major party candidates know that they can raise more money and have a better primary strategy without it,” Vandewalker said. “Nothing more needs to be done to kill it legislatively. What needs to be done is to have it updated to make it viable for major party candidates to use.”

Some government reform groups say decimating the Presidential Election Campaign Fund is the wrong move.

“While no major party presidential candidate has used it for a number of years, this system should be updated and modernized, not gutted,” said Aaron Scherb, senior director of legislative affairs at nonprofit government reform group Common Cause.

Scherb said Congress should reform the fund to meet the realities for campaign fundraising today, “not divert the money for other uses.”

“For taxpayers who check the box to have a small portion of their tax allocations go to the Presidential Election Campaign Fund, they did it specifically for this fund, not for some other reason,” he said.

As the government faces a $828 billion deficit and ongoing hyper-partisan battles threatening government shutdowns over the past year, it’s not surprising that the Presidential Election Campaign Fund got pulled into budget negotiations, Vandewalker said.

“It would be great if the presidential public financing funds were updated and made useful to candidates and used for its intended purpose,” Vandewalker said. “Obviously, it's understandable that as it's not getting used for its intended purpose, that it's going to be a ripe target in budgetary planning.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) previously told Raw Story the Presidential Election Campaign Fund would be better used to close the nation’s budget gap.

“It's just sitting there … This is just a small effort on many other efforts that we have in trying to tackle this budget,” Ernst said in 2023. “You’ve just got to get out there and raise money if you're gonna play, so why do we do this?”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) has advocated for a repurposing of Presidential Election Campaign Fund money. (WHO)

Ernst did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

Common Cause and the Brennan Center both support small-dollar donor match systems for funding presidential elections and the Freedom to Vote Act, which aims to curb partisan gerrymandering and the influence of big money in politics.

“Too often big and dark money calls the shots in politics,” Scherb said. “Certainly, money will always play a role in politics, but this Presidential Election Campaign fund kind of provides an alternative path to give more of a megaphone to nurses and teachers and firefighters in the political system to make sure that their voice can be heard at the presidential level.”

Another bill that’s stalled in Congress, the Empowering Mass Participation to Offset the Wealthy’s Electoral Role (EMPOWER) Act, would support a small donor match system and “revitalize presidential campaign public financing,” according to a February press release.

Sens. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) reintroduced the bill alongside Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA). None responded to Raw Story’s request for comment.

Rep. Tom Cole (R-OK) called for the complete elimination of the Presidential Election Campaign Fund in January 2023. He has sponsored the Strengthen the Pediatric Research Initiative Act, which if passed, would transfer the remaining funds into pediatric research.

Cole’s congressional office did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), who serves as chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, which oversees federal elections, did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

Prior to this month, the last expenditure from the Presidential Election Campaign Fund occurred in July, providing nearly $47.5 million to the National Institute of Health for the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, a 10-year initiative funding pediatric research.

In 2014, Obama signed legislation that eliminated the use of the fund for national political party conventions, diverting the money that would have otherwise been used for that purpose toward research supporting childhood cancers and diseases.

Rep. Van Hollen pushes to enhance Super PAC disclosure

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) plans to introduce legislation that would require Super PACS to more fully disclose donations and stand by their ads, according to The Huffington Post.

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Rep. Van Hollen blasts GOP over drug testing the jobless

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) on Sunday slammed House Republicans for proposing that those who receive federal unemployment benefits should be forced to undergo drug testing.

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