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For more on House Republican primary infighting, watch “Inside Politics with Manu Raju” on Sunday at 8 a.m. Washington CNN —GOP Rep. Don Bacon has had it with the far-right of his conference. Now McCarthy allies in the House GOP Conference are considering giving a boost to Aaron Dimmock, the retired Navy officer facing off against Gaetz in the August 20 primary. And while the outcomes in most of these primary races won’t impact the GOP’s efforts to keep the majority, they will shape the makeup of the next House Republican Conference and how they pursue their agenda. Several of Gonzales' colleagues in the House are backing a GOP primary challenger in his race for reelection.
Persons: Manu Raju ”, Don Bacon, They’ve, Republicans —, Bob Good, , Bob Good’s, ” Bacon, we’ve, Tony Gonzales, Matt Gaetz, Good —, Adam Morgan, William Timmons, Kevin McCarthy, John McGuire, McCarthy, Mike Johnson, Dan Newhouse, Donald Trump, MAGA, Scott Perry, Jerrod, Gaetz —, McCarthy —, Gaetz, Aaron Dimmock, Derrick Van Orden, tubby ”, Chip Roy, Samuel Corum, Trump, , Ralph Norman, Morgan, Timmons, Joe Biden, Sen, Tony Vargas, Bacon, Dan Frei —, Lee Terry, “ He’s, ” Frei, Frei, Eric Underwood, Underwood, Bacon doesn’t, ” Underwood, he’s, Frei mailer, it’s, Gonzales, Tom Williams, Sarah Chamberlain, McGuire, Good’s, Steve Bannon, I’ve, ” Johnson, that’s, undercutting, CNN’s Jeff Zeleny, Sheden Tesfaldet Organizations: Republican, Washington CNN, GOP, Republicans, Nebraska Republican, CNN, Congress, Caucus, Rep, Good, Washington, Trump, Freedom Caucus, House GOP Conference, Navy, Gaetz, , Wisconsin Republican, Capitol, Getty, House Republican Conference, Democratic, Nebraska Republican Party, Nebraska Republicans, , mailer, Republican Main Street Partnership, Nebraska GOP Locations: Nebraska, Texas, Florida, South Carolina, Virginia, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Washington, Ukraine
Like other Republicans in the House Freedom Caucus, Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, the group’s former leader, carries a pungently far-right portfolio. He has been an unswerving loyalist of former President Donald J. Trump. He has voted against aid to Ukraine and against keeping the government open. Such stances are not especially controversial to Republican primary voters. But among archconservative House members, only Mr. Perry must sell those same views to voters in a politically competitive district this November.
Persons: Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Donald J, Trump, archconservative, Perry, Janelle Stelson Organizations: Caucus, Republican, Democratic, Congressional District Locations: Scott Perry of, Ukraine, Pennsylvania’s
The House overwhelmingly passed a bill on Wednesday that could lead to TikTok being banned. 50 Democrats and 15 Republicans voted against it. AdvertisementThe House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill on Wednesday that could lead to TikTok being banned in the United States. The "Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act" easily cleared the chamber by a lopsided 352-65 vote, with 50 Democrats and 15 Republicans voting against the bill. @RepMTG on TikTok bill: "I rise today as the only member of Congress that has ever been banned by social media...Twitter banned me..
Persons: Jasmine Crockett, , ByteDance, Abigail Spanberger, Raja Krishnamoorthi, weren't, Alexandria Ocasio, Mark Pocan, Maxwell Frost of Florida, Frost, Krishnamoorthi, Donald Trump, backhandedly, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Mark Zuckerberg, Joe Biden's, Andy Biggs, Arizona Dan Bishop of, Carolina Warren Davidson of Ohio John Duarte, California Matt Gaetz, Florida Marjorie Taylor Greene, Georgia Clay Higgins, Nancy Mace, Carolina Thomas Massie, Tom McClintock, California Alex Mooney, West Virginia Barry Moore, Alabama Scott Perry, David Schweikert, Arizona Greg Steube Organizations: Democratic, Service, Foreign, Energy, Commerce, Facebook, Republican, Twitter Locations: United States, Texas, Virginia, Beijing, Illinois, Alexandria, Cortez, Wisconsin, Georgia, Carolina, California, Florida, West, Arizona
CNN —When President Joe Biden convenes a joint session of Congress, his Cabinet, military leaders and Supreme Court justices for his highly anticipated State of the Union address next week, it’s possible that the government could be partially shut down – and barreling toward a full shutdown. Biden’s address, set for Thursday, March 7, falls between a pair of critical government funding deadlines. It would mark the first time a US president has delivered a State of the Union address during a government shutdown, partial or otherwise, and would reflect how an increasingly polarized Congress has repeatedly struggled to reach consensus on what was once a governing imperative. While it’s legally and logistically feasible for a president to deliver a State of the Union address during a partial shutdown, there are considerations about the message that doing so would send at home and around the globe. Trump ultimately delivered the address upon the conclusion of the 35-day shutdown.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, it’s, , Maya MacGuineas, “ It’s, Scott Perry of, Perry, , Nancy Pelosi, Donald Trump, Pelosi, disinvited Trump, Trump, Mike Johnson, MacGuineas Organizations: CNN, Union, Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, Housing, Urban Development, Transportation, Energy, Republicans, White, Republican, Fox Business, Service, Department of Homeland Security, Louisiana Republican Locations: America, Congress, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Louisiana
Some of the ire has been directed at House Oversight Chairman James Comer, who has spearheaded the investigation into Biden family business records. “I don’t think it goes anywhere,” one Republican lawmaker said of the Biden impeachment inquiry. One senior GOP impeachment inquiry aide said it would be “a win too in our eyes” if the probe ended with legislative proposals to reform federal ethics laws, regardless of the decision on impeachment. House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, who is co-leading the investigation, acknowledged a Biden impeachment is not a forgone conclusion. “Nobody is talking about that,” said GOP Rep. Dan Newhouse of Washington state, when asked for his thoughts on the Biden impeachment inquiry.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden's, Hunter Biden, James, ahas, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Biden, , Nicole Malliotakis, , , James Comer, Kevin McCarthy, Comer, we’ve, it’s, Alejandro Mayorkas, Jim Jordan, ” Jordan, Jason Smith, Biden – it’s, I’m, ” Comer, Comer’s, Steve Scalise, BIden’s, ” Scalise, Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania, David Schweikert, Mike Garcia of California, Dan Newhouse, David Valadao of, you’re, Hunter Biden’s, Hunter, Victoria Spartz, “ It’s, ” CNN’s Haley Talbot Organizations: Republicans, Democratic, GOP, Republican, New York, CNN, Homeland, Representatives, Committee, Biden, Washington, Victoria Locations: Scott Perry of, New, Jordan, Missouri, Arizona, David Valadao of California, Victoria Spartz of Indiana, House
But Greene said she had a tougher time connecting with Speaker Mike Johnson, who doesn’t have a strong relationship with the congresswoman. “I haven’t heard much from him,” Greene told CNN earlier this week. Greene said Johnson heard her out and gave her assurances that her impeachment articles would move through committee and on to the floor. Taking a page from his predecessor’s playbook, Johnson has tried to dole out commitments and face-time to some of his potential critics. GOP Rep. Bob Good of Virginia said the Freedom Caucus made clear to the speaker on Thursday what their expectations are.
Persons: Marjorie Taylor Greene, Alejandro Mayorkas, Greene –, , Kevin McCarthy’s, Greene, Mike Johnson, Johnson, ” Greene, George Santos, playbook, Max Miller, , He’s, I’m, ” Miller, he’d, I’ve, Chip Roy, Roy, “ We’re, McCarthy, Matt Gaetz, Hunter, James Biden, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, they’d, Kevin McCarthy, Dusty Johnson, , McCarthy derangement, Tom Cole of, “ It’s, She’s, ” Rep, Don Bacon, Joe Biden, impeaching Mayorkas, Darrell Issa of, Issa, It’s, Tom McClintock of, bombast, ” McClintock, Rashida Tlaib, there’s, Santos, can’t, Bob Good, Virginia, ” Good, Mike Garcia, Mike, ” Roy Organizations: Georgia Republican, impeaching Homeland, Republican, CNN, Louisiana Republican, GOP, Ohio Republican, Texas, Freedom Caucus, White, Capitol, Republican Conference, South Dakota Republican, ” Veteran GOP, , GOP Rep, Caucus, Democratic Locations: Georgia, Louisiana, Israel, Florida, Scott Perry of, , Tom Cole of Oklahoma, Nebraska, Darrell Issa of California, Tom McClintock of California, Ukraine, Taiwan, ” California
It was the latest failure on spending bills under Mr. Johnson, the speaker elected three weeks ago. Like his predecessor, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, he managed to win approval of a temporary spending bill that took the threat of a shutdown off the table. Now, however, he is being punished for it by the far right, which is bent on slashing federal spending and conditioning it on conservative policies. In preventing a shutdown, Mr. Johnson essentially took the same bipartisan path that cost Mr. McCarthy the speakership last month. We want to see good, righteous policy, but we’re not going to be part of the failure theater anymore.”
Persons: Johnson, Kevin McCarthy of California, , Chip Roy, Roy, McCarthy, Johnson’s, “ We’ve, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, , we’re Organizations: Republicans, Commerce, State, Justice, Freedom Caucus Locations: Texas, Scott Perry of
The failed full-court press to install Republican Rep. Jim Jordan as House Speaker revealed ugly examples of how violent threats are becoming normalized inside Trump’s GOP. According to Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas, the strategy behind the threats is to “Attack, attack, attack. In the run-up to that attack, members of the Proud Boys even bragged that they could dress up as Antifa. In the next breath, however, he says that the war in Israel creates moral urgency to push through a Jim Jordan speakership. Any sense that this was a random unhinged person without a partisan political agenda was demolished by his demand that the congressman vote for “Jim Jordan or more conservative.” This caller has explicit right-wing ideological demands.
Persons: John Avlon, , Jim Jordan, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Jordan, Ken Buck, Colorado, he’d, Steve Womack, “ It’s, , Jake Tapper’s, ” It’s, bender, That’s, Jim Jordan speakership, doesn’t, , Trump, Trump’s, Liz Cheney, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Jake Sherman, Rep, Warren Davidson, Donald Trump’s, Utah Sen, Mitt Romney, Jordan couldn’t Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, , NBC, Republicans, Capitol, Trump, Rep, Punchbowl News, Ohio, Republican Party, Utah Locations: “ Lincoln, Iowa, Arkansas, Israel, Scott Perry of
On Wednesday, Rep. Jim Jordan failed to win the speaker's gavel for the second time. In a striking blow to his candidacy, even more House Republicans voted against him than last time. The House of Representatives held a second vote on the matter on Wednesday, one day after 20 House Republicans voted against their own party's nominee for the top job. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Republicans who voted against Jordan supported a range of other candidates, including McCarthy, Scalise, and former Rep. Lee Zeldin. Here are the 22 Republicans who voted against Jordan:
Persons: Jim Jordan, , Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Steve Scalise's, Scalise, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, — Rep, Scott Perry, Pennsylvania, Perry, Patrick McHenry, Lee Zeldin, Hakeem Jeffries Organizations: Republicans, Service, Ohio Republican, Twitter Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ukraine, Israel
Rep. Jim Jordan again fell short on Wednesday in his bid to become speaker, his prospects growing dimmer as time wore on. Twenty-two House Republicans voted against the Ohio Republican, as his opposition grew from a day prior, spelling trouble for his path forward in the chamber. Adding to Jordan’s troubles was a pledge by lawmakers to support Jordan in the first round as a good-faith show of support to their party’s speaker nominee – but not necessarily beyond. “This is the fight – which Jim Jordan represents – to end the status quo, and it ain’t easy,” Perry said. A group of Republicans on Wednesday were reportedly eyeing moving forward with a motion to empower Rep. Patrick McHenry, who was designated speaker pro tempore when former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Jordan’s, Scott Perry, ” Perry, , Tom Cole, you’re, Patrick McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, McHenry Organizations: Republicans, Ohio Republican, Republican, Oklahoma Republican, Wednesday, , Democrats Locations: Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Jordan, , Oklahoma
CNN —Conservative Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio is bringing the House back to the floor Tuesday to vote on whether he will succeed ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy and finally end the chamber’s prolonged paralysis amid deep GOP divisions. But it’s not clear whether Jordan can be the one who unifies the fractured House Republican conference, with some lawmakers still opposed. Jordan can now only lose three votes, instead of four, but this is a temporary drop until the Florida congressman returns. “We need to get a speaker tomorrow,” Jordan said Monday after leaving a closed-door GOP conference meeting. Several Republicans – including from districts won by President Joe Biden – declined to say Monday evening whether they would vote for Jordan on the floor.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Gus Bilirakis, Bilirakis, , ” Jordan, , , holdouts, Ann Wagner of Missouri, Nicole Malliotakis, Jordan doesn’t, McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Kevin, Steve, Don Bacon of Nebraska, That’s, Mario Diaz, Joe Biden –, Scott Perry of, Scalise, ” Perry, Jim didn’t, Jim Jordan Organizations: CNN — Conservative Republican, Ohio Republican, Republican, Capitol, CNN, GOP, House Republicans, Trump, Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ohio, Florida, Washington, New York, Israel, Jordan
CNN —House Speaker Kevin McCarthy unilaterally gave his conference the green light to launch an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. “There has to be an aha moment.” Rep. Darrell Issa of California, a Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee, told CNN. McCarthy – who spoke for 15 minutes before a scheduled presentation on their Biden impeachment inquiry – also expressed annoyance over their spending struggles and inability to find consensus, saying “hell yeah” he is frustrated. “Until I see the evidence of an impeachable offense, I’m not in favor of impeachment inquiry or impeachment.”Some moderates in swing districts, though, are expressing support for the impeachment inquiry, and dismissing concerns that it could negatively impact the GOP. Some House Republicans cautioned that an impeachment inquiry does not make articles of impeachment inevitable.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, McCarthy, Biden –, Darrell Issa of, , Hunter Biden, , ” Issa, Republicans –, Jim Jordan, “ We’re, ” Jordan, , McCarthy –, Biden, impeaching Biden, Clinton, Tom Cole, Kat Cammack, Brian Mast, Dan Newhouse, Donald Trump, Tim Burchett, Jim Jordan’s, Republicans don’t, McCarthy’s, We’ve, Matt Gaetz, James Biden, “ Hunter Biden, Hunter, can’t, Scott Perry of, James Biden’s, ” Comer, James Comer, Jordan, Jason Smith of Missouri, They’ve, ” McCarthy, Nancy Pelosi, Mike Johnson, ” Newhouse, Comer, Jordan trekked, John Thune of, ” Sen, Lindsey Graham of, ” Graham, There’s, Ken Buck, Ken Buck of Colorado, Buck, ” Buck, I’m, Nick LaLota, ” Johnson, ” Mast Organizations: CNN —, House Republicans, , Republican, CNN, Republicans, Ohio Republican, Capitol, GOP, Senate, Dan Newhouse of Washington, hardliner, Hunter Biden, McCarthy’s, Democrats, Senate Republican, Biden Locations: Darrell Issa of California, Ohio, Florida, Dan Newhouse of, Tennessee, John Thune of South Dakota, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Ken Buck of, , New York
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was kicked out of the House Freedom Caucus earlier this month. She reportedly first found out about the decision as she scrolled Twitter on the House floor. The ouster came after she developed a close working relationship with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. download the app Email address By clicking ‘Sign up’, you agree to receive marketing emails from Insider as well as other partner offers and accept our Terms of Service and Privacy PolicyRepublican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene reportedly learned that she'd been booted from the hard-right House Freedom Caucus only after seeing her own name trending on Twitter. Greene, who by then had a strained relationship with many members of the Freedom Caucus, reportedly told another conservative lawmaker that the group "doesn't care about" her bill.
Persons: Marjorie Taylor Greene, Kevin McCarthy, she'd, Greene, Scott Perry, Kevin McCarthy's, Georgia lawmaker's, Trump, Staff Reince Preibus, State Rex Tillerson, Mark Esper —, Donald Trump, Lauren Boebert, McCarthy Organizations: Caucus, Twitter, Service, Republican, New York Times, Freedom Caucus, White, Staff, State Locations: Wall, Silicon, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Georgia, Colorado
A conservative PAC is pledging $20 million to back representatives who voted against Kevin McCarthy for House Speaker. A memo from the group published by Politico explains how the PAC plans to spend its money. It says the PAC will defend its members from "moderate donors and candidates" in the primary. Once the general election comes around, McIntosh promised to financially support any of the "Patriot 20" whose seats have been targeted as vulnerable by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. These representatives include Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, and Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, David McIntosh, McIntosh, Scott Perry, Anna Paulina Luna of, Lauren Boebert, Adam Frisch, Boebert's Organizations: House, Politico, Service, Republican, Growth, Club, Growth's, Democratic Congressional, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Federal Elections Commission Locations: Wall, Silicon, Scott Perry of, Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, Colorado
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has been ousted from the GOP Freedom Caucus, a member told NBC. One member told NBC she had been kicked out because of her feuding with other members. "She's not a member of the Freedom Caucus, and she shouldn't be in the future," Buck told NBC. "She has consistently attacked other members of the Freedom Caucus in an irresponsible way, and as a result of that she was kicked out of the Freedom Caucus." And I guess the Freedom Caucus does a good job of talking to you more than [their] members," she told reporters on Tuesday, according to the Hill.
Persons: Marjorie Taylor Greene, MTG, Georgia —, Ken Buck, Greene, Buck, Lauren Boebert, Kevin McCarthy, Scott Perry of, Greene —, haven't, Perry, y'all, McCarthy, Axios Organizations: GOP, Caucus, NBC, Service, NBC News, Freedom Caucus, CNN Locations: Wall, Silicon, Georgia, Ken Buck of Colorado, Colorado, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania
Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz was a key player in the House speaker vote fight. "I don't think this guy's looking to be a policymaker," the GOP strategist told Insider. Doug Heye, a former House leadership aide turned GOP strategist, said the jury's still very much out on Gaetz's motivations and his endgame. Or, it could be as easy as believing that guy who donned a gas mask to ridicule a House vote on COVID-19 relief is committed to troublemaking. Not a workaholicA former House GOP leadership aide said Gaetz's reputation precedes him on Capitol HIll.
House Republican leaders have stocked the oversight panel with partisan bomb-throwers. Many of the new panelists voted to overturn the 2020 election and defied Jan. 6 investigators. Retired Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney, who chaired the House Oversight Committee last session, asserted that this new cast of characters were getting into it for the wrong reasons. "The personal vendettas these committees pursue are not a legitimate use of the oversight power. "These are basically the people who own Kevin McCarthy at this point," Bardella told Insider at the Facts First event.
Rep. Dan Bishop of South Carolina , one of 13 holdouts who flipped to back McCarthy on the 12th ballot, will continue to serve on the Judiciary Committee. , one of 13 holdouts who flipped to back McCarthy on the 12th ballot, will continue to serve on the Judiciary Committee. , who flipped to McCarthy on the 12th ballot, won a seat on the Homeland Security Committee. , who also flipped to McCarthy on the 12th ballot, won a new seat on the powerful Appropriations Committee, which controls federal spending. Rep. Mary Miller of Illinois , who flipped to McCarthy on the 12th ballot, will remain on the Agriculture Committee.
The House GOP voted to create a new subcommittee that they say is modeled after the Church Committee. The new subcommittee is officially known as the "Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government" and will be housed under the House Judiciary Committee. Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar had previously publicly expressed some interest in the committee, but ultimately voted against its creation on Tuesday. He added that the committee would have "at least as much as the January 6 committee" in terms of its budget and staffing. Under the language of the resolution establishing the committee, the 13-member panel will be composed of eight Republicans and five Democrats.
Congressman Scott Perry of Pennsylvania is an ally of former President Donald Trump who helped spread Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him through widespread voting fraud. The FBI seized his phone in August, apparently as part of a probe into efforts to overturn the election. Trump has accused the FBI, without evidence, of launching the probes as political retribution again him. The Democratic-led House Select Committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol has said Perry and some other fellow Republicans later sought a pardon from the White House for their efforts to overturn the 2020 election, though Perry has denied doing so. Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Raphael Satter; Editing by Lisa ShumakerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Kevin McCarthy was elected speaker on Friday night after a week of disarray and 15 rounds of voting. Thanks to the events of the past week, McCarthy may struggle to manage the slim GOP majority. "It's a schism within a schism," Kevin Kosar, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who studies Congress and US politics, told Insider. But during the House speaker battle this week, some of them found themselves on opposites sides, even after their would-be leader, Trump, took a stance. With new divisions and animosities on display after the House speaker battle, it's unclear how effectively McCarthy will be able to do just that.
Share this -Link copiedMcCarthy elected speaker in 15th round McCarthy was elected House speaker Saturday shortly after midnight on the 15th ballot. Share this -Link copiedHouse reconvenes to hold 14th round of speaker votes The House has reconvened to begin the 14th round of speaker votes. Read the rest of the story, The House speaker election, in three charts. Share this -Link copiedHouse begins 13th round The House is beginning the 13th round of speaker votes. At least 14 House GOP flip to support McCarthy in twelfth speaker vote Jan. 6, 2023 01:52 Share this -Link copied
“It’s critically important that the Rules Committee reflect the body and reflect the will of the people. “What we’re seeing is the incredibly shrinking speakership,” former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in an interview Friday. “The reason these people want to be on the Rules Committee is they want to screw things up for McCarthy. The message the leader received from his deal-making centrists: We can live with giving Freedom Caucus members committee slots but committee gavels are a “nonstarter.”“Nobody should get a chairmanship without earning it,” Bacon said. That pisses us off.”Díaz-Balart said he had received assurances that “there are no deals cut about chairmanships” to committees as part of swaying votes to make McCarthy speaker.
Kevin McCarthy lost his 12th speaker ballot Friday. The converts are still reviewing rules changes McCarthy has promised in exchange for the gavel. "Watch here and you'll see some people who have been voting against me voting for me," McCarthy told reporters at the US Capitol. Republican Reps.-elect Ken Buck of Colorado and Wesley Hunt of Texas, both McCarthy supporters, were both absent Friday morning because of personal reasons. "You only earn the position if you get the votes," Gaetz said on the House floor, a taunt that caused McCarthy supporter Rep-elect Mike Bost of Illinois to shout his disapproval.
A group of 20 ultra-conservative Republicans continues to stonewall his leadership ambitions. More than half denied the 2020 election result and a handful are mentioned in the now-dissolved January 6 committee's report. But several of the political personalities at the heart of that attack are the same ones now holding the speakership hostage. All three lawmakers denied allegations that they were involved in planning the event. Meanwhile, the FBI seized the phone of Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania in August of last year.
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