In The News

Daines, Tester Voice Their Thoughts On GOP Healthcare

Members of Congress are home for their 4th of July recess without voting on the Republican’s health care proposal.   Senators Jon Tester, D-MT, and Steve Daines, R-MT, both held public forums over the past week to gather Montanans opinions on the issue. Tester says the current GOP bill is not the answer. So when asked if he is willing to work to fix this proposal or the current law, Tester says yes. If it’s the later, he suggests dropping the politically charged moniker Obamacare.   “Let’s call it the current health care system we have or whatever we want to

Cancel August recess for Congress, group of Senate Republicans say

A group of 10 Senate Republicans are calling on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to cancel their scheduled August recess from Washington in order to catch up on their legislative agenda on which they’re falling behind. The relatively small faction among the 52 Senate Republicans want McConnell “to cancel the Senate’s scheduled August state work period if meaningful progress has not been made on the following five priorities: fixing health care, funding the government, dealing with the debt ceiling, passing the budget resolution and improving our tax code,” they wrote in a letter to the Kentucky Republican Friday. There are

GOP senators call for McConnell to shorten August recess

The GOP’s long-stalled agenda is boiling over. A group of 10 senators is sending a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Friday morning asking for the GOP leader to shorten the August recess — or cancel it altogether — if the party does not make significant headway on its priorities in July, according to a copy obtained by POLITICO. The letter comes right after Congress left Thursday and scattered across the country for a July 4 recess. Spearheaded by Sen. David Perdue of Georgia, the bloc of 10 senators said the five-week break should be on the

GOP senators call for McConnell to shorten August recess

The GOP’s long-stalled agenda is boiling over. A group of 10 senators is sending a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Friday morning asking for the GOP leader to shorten the August recess — or cancel it altogether — if the party does not make significant headway on its priorities in July, according to a copy obtained by POLITICO. The letter comes right after Congress left Thursday and scattered across the country for a July 4 recess. Spearheaded by Sen. David Perdue of Georgia, the bloc of 10 senators said the five-week break should be on the

Unresolved issues, very little time for Senate GOP

The Senate will return to Washington next month facing a breakneck schedule with a slew of unresolved issues, including healthcare, defense and the budget.  Republicans kicked a vote on repealing and replacing ObamaCare until after the July 4 recess, hoping to buy themselves more time to overcome the impasse between moderates and conservatives.  But the move adds another piece of legislation to what was already expected to be a jam-packed laundry list and a tight floor schedule.  The Senate will likely leave town for the weeklong break on Thursday after spending two days eating through floor time on a nomination

Tester says healthcare bill “does bad things”, Daines to hear from Montanans before decision

It now looks like a vote on the Senate Health Care bill won’t happen until senators return from their upcoming July 4 recess. Democratic Senator Jon Tester, who has criticized the bill, hosted a Facebook live town hall Tuesday night and fielded questions for an hour. He says the hardest hit Montanans are those in their 50s and 60s, as well as the working poor. “I think there will be a lot of arm twisting over the next few weeks trying to get people to vote for this bill. It does some pretty bad things,” Tester said. “It imposes an age tax on folks in

Daines: Montana’s Medicaid expansion could end by 2019 without new federal law

Montana’s Republican Sen. Steve Daines said in a call with constituents Wednesday night that Medicaid expansion, which now covers about 79,000 around the state, would likely end in 2019 regardless of a U.S. Senate bill expected to terminate the program by 2026. When Montana chose to join with 31 other states and expand Medicaid coverage to the working poor in 2015, the Legislature included a sunset clause that requires lawmakers in 2019 to reassess the program. Daines said he spoke Wednesday with state Sen. Ed Buttrey, R-Great Falls, who helped craft the expansion bill, and Buttrey said he didn’t think

Daines re-invites EPA’s Pruitt to Montana, pushes back against Superfund cuts

Republican Sen. Steve Daines has reiterated his invitation to Environmental Protection Agency’s top administrator Scott Pruitt to visit a Superfund site in Montana. Daines first gave the invitation to Pruitt in February at the time of Pruitt’s confirmation hearing. Pruitt, so far, has not taken Daines up on that offer. When he visited a Superfund site since becoming EPA’s top administrator, he instead visited a site in Chicago that is contaminated with lead. But in a letter Daines gave to Pruitt after Pruitt’s hearing before the Senate subcomittee on appropriations for the environment and other agenices Tuesday on Capitol Hill

The 5 factions that could kill Senate Republicans’ health-care bill before it even gets a vote

The Senate’s health-care bill could go down in flames any number of ways. And after a nonpartisan congressional report estimated Monday the Senate bill could cause 22 million more people to lose their health insurance over the next decade while raising out-of-pocket costs for elderly and low-income Americans, it’s at risk of death by half a dozen mini fires. Here are the five factions in the Senate that are coalescing against this bill and could make it a very real possibility that it fails, perhaps even before leaders bring it to a vote this week 1) The no-repeal, no-deal faction Think of this group