WASHINGTON – After a sour spring, Congress is prepping for the summertime blues.
With the August recess just a few weeks away, there is one question on everyone’s mind on Capitol Hill: Can Republicans move any major legislation this summer? Or if not that, can they even move basic, must-pass bills to keep the government functioning normally?
That the answers to those questions are not clear shows how things have changed for the Republican-controlled Congress since the high hopes of January.
Internal GOP divisions and general chaos coming from the White House have translated to meager legislative accomplishments so far.
Republicans are increasingly backing off timelines to wrap up any of the items high on their agenda by August.
A rolling stream of evidence about the 2016 Russian cyberattacks and connections to allies of President Donald Trump continues to undermine public relations efforts to focus on other issues.
So much so, that Republicans who used to roll their eyes at Democratic concerns are now beginning to wonder what the future holds on the Russian front.
Why does any of this matter, given that we are barely six months into the new administration? Because sooner rather than later, the pressure of the 2018 midterms is likely to further paralyze Congress.
And then there is the unknown: Members are increasingly bracing for more curve balls coming from an unpredictable White House.
Nonetheless, five issues remain the most likely to dominate Congress’ summer. Texans are well-positioned to potentially play key roles in all of them:
Russia Investigations
While members spent the week back home, Congressional subpoenas were flying around Washington. Upcoming hearings are likely to only increase attention on the investigations.
And it all starts Thursday with former FBI Director James Comey set to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee.
The notion that a fired FBI director is postured to reveal possibly incriminating evidence against a sitting president of the United States has members of both parties stunned and concerned.
There are likely to be plenty of other hearings on both sides of the U.S. Capitol, even as special counsel Robert Mueller continues his own Justice Department investigation.
Texans to watch: Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, U.S. Reps. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, and Will Hurd, R-San Antonio, all serve on their chamber’s intelligence committees and will participate in hearings.
But no one will be closer to the storm than U.S. Rep. Mike Conaway of Midland who is the Republican leader of the House-side investigation.
Raising the debt ceiling
Ever since Republicans took control of the U.S. House in 2011, the concept of increasing the government’s ability to borrow money has become a game of chicken between the two parties.
Most economists say a default would be economically catastrophic, but such brinksmanship can translate into the opposition exacting major demands.”
Congress was bracing for a fall fight. But some Trump administration officials suggest the need to raise the limit could come sooner and are urging Congress to address the issue before they let out for the August recess.
Texans to watch: House Freedom Caucus members like Republican U.S. Reps Louie Gohmert of Tyler and Randy Weber of Friendswood, combined with Texas Democrats who tend to fall in line behind House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, will undoubtedly squeeze the House Republican leadership from opposite directions amid debt limit negotiations.
Health care overhaul
Cornyn predicted Republicans will pass a repeal and replace of former President Obama’s 2010 health law by the August recess. Few others on Capitol Hill are that optimistic.
The House passed a bill in early March that has drawn strong opposition from the Senate, which is expected to craft its own version of the legislation.
Previous efforts to pass an overhaul unleashed tumult within the House GOP and ate up most of the winter and spring.
Republicans are worried about more town hall backlash over the August recess over health care. Such scenes dogged Democrats in the summer of 2009 amid their push for a health care overhaul during Obama’s first term.
Texans to watch: Both Cornyn and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz are participating in a Senate working group to hash out health care policy.
Cornyn, as the Senate majority whip, will be the lead vote-counter on any legislation; and Cruz is influential among House conservatives.
Additionally, U.S. Reps. Kevin Brady of the Woodlands and Michael Burgess of Lewisville, have committee assignments that make them key players on this issue.
Freedom Caucus members like Gohmert and Weber could be pivotal votes if the House and Senate ever aim to reconcile different versions of a bill.
If that came to pass, Hurd, who is expected to face a tough re-election race in 2018, will also be one to watch amid the vote-counting efforts of GOP House leaders.
Tax code overhaul
Rewriting the tax code is so difficult that it is typically addressed only once in a generation. Hopes were high at the dawn of the Trump administration. But a tax code overhaul was tied to the success of passing of a health care overhaul – which hasn’t happened yet.
Initially, the hope was to move tax legislation by the August recess. House leaders have scaled back those ambitions and are now hoping it will pass by the end of the calendar year.
Texans to watch: Brady, the U.S. House Ways and Means chairman, can be spotted regularly racing through the capitol to meetings and television interviews to champion this cause.
Financial Regulation Overhaul
There is, possibly, no bill House Financial Services Chairman Jeb Hensarling has worked harder to move than an overhaul of Dodd-Frank, a Democratic-led legislation to rewrite Wall Street regulations in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
He’ll likely have some success in the next week, as the U.S. House is expected to vote on a Hensarling-crafted bill.
But like so many other conservative dreams, this one could wind up choked in the U.S. Senate.
Last month, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky downplayed expectations the legislation would make it through the U.S. Senate, although he said he supported the concept. Several GOP Congressional sources agreed with this assessment.
Texans to watch: Hensarling.
This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune. The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
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