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RFK Jr. isn't hiding his plans for vaccines. Democrats say it will cost lives.

RFK Jr. isn't hiding his plans for vaccines. Democrats say it will cost lives.

Yahoo15 hours ago

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. isn't shading his big plans for the country's vaccine safety system anymore.
The health secretary and longtime vaccine skeptic pledged during his Senate confirmation earlier this year to leave that alone. But at a House health panel hearing Tuesday, Kennedy said there was ample reason to worry some vaccines aren't safe and gave no ground to Democrats who pointed out that most scientists and public health experts vehemently disagree.
'How can you mandate – which effectively is what they do — these products to healthy children without knowing the risk profile?' Kennedy said in explaining why he earlier this month fired 17 members of a CDC vaccine advisory panel and replaced them with eight new members, many of them skeptical of vaccine safety.
The hearing was officially about President Donald Trump's fiscal 2026 budget proposal for the Department of Health and Human Services, but Kennedy's testimony came after he rolled back guidance for healthy adults and children to get Covid shots and purged the outside vaccine experts. Some Democrats wanted to focus more on those decisions than Trump's plan to cut the HHS budget by a quarter.
They pointed out that studies have consistently upheld vaccine safety and predicted Kennedy's moves would contribute to vaccine skepticism and cost lives.
'It's clear to me that the vast majority of scientists and medical professionals think your views on vaccines are dangerous,' said New Jersey's Frank Pallone, the top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee. 'The science is not on your side. I just really think people are going to die as a result of your actions.'
After that, things got hot. Kennedy accused Pallone of abandoning people injured by vaccines because of pharmaceutical company campaign contributions.
The top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee, Diana DeGette of Colorado, raised a point of order, saying Kennedy had impugned Pallone's integrity and needed to take back his accusation.
Kennedy retracted it, but temperatures remained high. Questioned by Democrat Robin Kelly of Illinois about his decision to stop recommending Covid vaccination to pregnant women — a move criticized by doctors' groups — Kennedy didn't give an inch.
'We are no longer recommending it because there is no science supporting the recommendation,' he said, adding that 'study after study shows adverse effects.' One, he said, had found increased risk of miscarriage.
Public health experts, including those HHS has cited, say that's not the case.
But Kennedy argued that many of the experts on which the government has relied, including those he fired from the vaccine advisory panel, were 'rife with conflicts of interest' with drug companies and had 'committed multiple acts of malpractice.'
The new panel of Kennedy-appointed advisers will begin their first meeting tomorrow at the headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. They'll review a vaccine preservative, thimerosal, Kennedy has long wanted banned, Covid shots Kennedy has said are the 'deadliest vaccines ever made,' as well as the measles vaccine he has suggested causes autism.
Kennedy offered none of the conciliatory tone on vaccines he did when he was seeking the top job at the Department of Health and Human Services or even in more recent congressional hearings, at which he half-heartedly endorsed measles vaccines.
Rep. Kim Schrier (D-Wash.) accused Kennedy of lying to Sen. Bill Cassidy, the chair of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, about his intentions on vaccine policy.
Cassidy was the deciding vote on Kennedy's confirmation at the committee level, and the Louisiana Republican said he agreed to vote for Kennedy only after he promised not to upend the nation's decision-making process on vaccines.
Kennedy told Schrier he never promised Cassidy he wouldn't make changes to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and a Cassidy spokesperson told POLITICO the senator 'has said publicly that the agreement was about the ACIP process, not the staffing of ACIP.'
But Cassidy, in a post to X last night, decried Kennedy's decision to replace the advisory panel members and said the new ones Kennedy had chosen didn't have the right experience for the job. He asked Kennedy to delay the meeting and appoint new members.
Schrier, who's a pediatrician, described to Kennedy in graphic ways the effects of some vaccine-preventable diseases in children.
'They cough so hard, they vomit, they run out of air, they break ribs, and if you don't catch it before two weeks, antibiotics don't even work,' she said about the effects of whooping cough in older children.
But some Republican lawmakers defended Kennedy for his willingness to challenge conventional wisdom to improve American health outcomes that are among the worst among wealthy countries.
'Thank you again for thinking outside the box. That's what it takes,' said Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) about Kennedy's support for drugmakers' incentives to develop drugs for rare diseases that affect children.
Rep. Kat Cammack, another Florida Republican, said Kennedy was 'a disruptor,' adding: 'That's what we need in these times because so many people, especially in Congress, want to maintain the same broken status quo.'
Kelly Hooper contributed reporting.

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Sherrill gets Scutari to back off Cabinet power play
Sherrill gets Scutari to back off Cabinet power play

Politico

time29 minutes ago

  • Politico

Sherrill gets Scutari to back off Cabinet power play

Good Wednesday morning! Democratic gubernatorial nominee Mikie Sherrill phoned Senate President Nick Scutari late last week after she learned of his proposal to limit the amount of time Cabinet members can serve without confirmation. Sherrill, perhaps not shockingly, didn't like the idea of giving the Senate more leverage over the executive branch. But Scutari didn't put up a fight. He agreed to put then never-formally introduced proposal aside — at least for now. Still, we don't know who the next governor is going to be. And if it's Republican Jack Ciattarelli, I can't help but wonder whether Scutari will take this idea back off the shelf. In other moves related to the balance of power, a bipartisan group of senators wants to make the State Police its own department for the first time since 1948, moving it out of the Attorney General's purview. More on that below. FEEDBACK? Reach me at mfriedman@ WHERE'S MURPHY — No public schedule QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'Don't try to get me killed out here. I mean, that's what killed those people in Minnesota.' — Senate President Nicholas Scutari on a stalled package of abortion rights bills HAPPY BIRTHDAY — Leonard Lance, Henry Klingeman WHAT TRENTON MADE BAD BOYS BAD BOYS, WHATCHA GONNA DO WHEN THEY MAKE A DEPARTMENT FOR YOU — Lawmakers seek to make State Police its own department, by POLITICO's Matt Friedman: Amid tensions between New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin and the state Legislature, a bipartisan group of senators is seeking to move the State Police out of the attorney general's authority. The new legislation would make the New Jersey State Police its own department for the first time in 76 years, removing it from within the Department of Law and Public Safety, which is led by the attorney general. 'I don't think a politically-appointed lawyer who does not know anything about policing should be the person responsible for the State Police to report to,' said state Sen. James Beach, a Democrat from Camden County who's the bill's prime sponsor. A spokesperson for the Attorney General's Office declined to comment. While the bill comes during a period of tension between Platkin and the Legislature — as well as between Platkin and the State Police — it likely won't take effect until the end of his tenure at the earliest if it passes, since New Jerseyans will elect a new governor in November. Beach and state Sen. Mike Testa, a Republican, are the two prime sponsors of the bill, NJ S4613 (24R). Democratic Sen. Linda Greenstein — chair of the Law and Public Safety Committee — and Republican Sen. Bob Singer are co-sponsors. 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Andy Kim wants to testify against the nomination of controversial Trump administration lawyer Emil Bove to a New Jersey Third Circuit judgeship before the Judiciary Committee today, but he doesn't expect he'll be allowed to. In a letter this morning, the freshman Democrat said Bove 'has demonstrated that he lacks the independence to objectively decide the cases before him, the temperament to serve on the bench, and the moral compass to comply with professional ethics obligations. 'During his short time with the Justice Department, Mr. Bove earned the reputation of being the President's enforcer by pressuring the office in the Southern District of New York to drop its prosecution of New York City Mayor Eric Adams, hunting investigators and prosecutors assigned to investigate the January 6 insurrection, and working to gut Department of Justice's numerous divisions, including the historic Civil Rights Division and the Public Integrity Section,' Kim wrote. 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Mikkelsen said after discovering the image the authorities sent him home to Norway the same day.' —'NJ's emergency medical services task force in funding crisis' —'Dem attorneys general vow to continue challenging Trump's 'outrageous overreach'' LOCAL EAST NEW JERSEY — Zohran Mamdani topples Andrew Cuomo in NYC mayoral race, by POLITICO's Jeff Coltin: — Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old democratic socialist lawmaker, is on pace to win the Democratic primary for New York City mayor — a seismic shift in what normally would have been a sleepy reelection for the incumbent, Eric Adams, and one that involved toppling Andrew Cuomo's political comeback. Cuomo conceded defeat late Tuesday night and said he called to congratulate Mamdani. 'Tonight was not our night' Cuomo said at the headquarters of the New York City carpenters union. 'I'm very proud of the campaign that we ran.' Mamdani won 43.5 percent of first-place votes to Cuomo's 36.3 percent, according to the New York City Board of Elections. But that outcome is not final. The board is expected to announce full results on July 1 in an election that utilized ranked-choice voting, which allows New Yorkers to pick up to five candidates in order of preference. JERSEY CITY — 'Child's death prompts rally for better traffic safety measures in N.J. city,' by NJ Advance Media's Larry Higgs: 'Jersey City safety and parent groups plan to rally at city hall at 5 p.m. Wednesday to demand more safety improvements and traffic enforcement after a tragic accident claimed the life of a 6-year-old boy on June 13. The groups are pressing city officials for more enforcement and an increase in safety infrastructure to protect pedestrians. 'Jersey City has made a lot of progress on Vision Zero, but it is not enough, and we need faster action to prevent more tragedies now,' said Jimmy Lee, a founder of Safe Streets Jersey City. 'We need to double-down and accelerate on what's been working.'' YOUR EMINENCE DOMAIN — 'Church vs. State battle erupts over 'deeply troubling' parish property fight,' by NJ Advance Media's Ricahrd Cowen: 'A legal battle is brewing between Queen of Peace Church parish and the North Arlington Board of Education, which is threatening to use eminent domain to acquire the church's La Salle Center for prekindergarten classrooms. Negotiations between the parish, the board of education and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Newark over a long-term lease of the La Salle Center recently broke down in May. Now both sides are gearing up for a potential legal battle between church and state. North Arlington school superintendent Stephen M. Yurchak said the board of education 'has begun the preliminary legal steps required under New Jersey law to explore eminent domain proceedings' to acquire the property, located next door to Queen of Peace Roman Catholic Church on Ridge Road.' DUCK THE POLICE COMIN' STRAIGHT FROM THE POND — 'Lacey Township police rescue 9 ducklings trapped in storm drain,' by The Press of Atlantic City's John O'Connor: 'Police rescued nine ducklings that fell into a storm drain Monday morning. Officers responded to an area near Lacey Mall for a report of several ducklings in distress and they discovered they were trapped, police said in a Facebook post. The ducklings were rescued and returned to their mother, who was waiting nearby, police said.' 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Some N.J. schools are holding outdoor graduations anyway' —'6 men sue Atlantic County alleging sexual abuse at Harborfields juvenile facility' —'Newark Public Schools adopts AI literacy screener as part of state plan to boost reading skills' —'After three-vote loss, Roselle candidate seeks recount' —'Toms River considers plan for first Orthodox Jewish high school' R.I.P. — 'Former Middle Township Mayor Dan Lockwood dies at 57' EVERYTHING ELSE LITERALLY UNFAIR — 'Meadowlands State Fair won't return until 2027. Here's why,' by The Record's Lucas Frau: 'The Meadowlands State Fair will not come to MetLife Stadium this year or next summer, with the venue hosting the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The fair announced on its website that the two-year hiatus comes at the request of MetLife Stadium to accommodate the numerous soccer games that will be played there over the next two summers. The rides and other activities will return to MetLife Stadium in 2027, the Meadowlands State Fair announcement said.' AN EVESHAME — 'Essential Pinelands waters under renewed development threat,' by Jeff Pillets for NJ Spotlight News: 'The headwaters of the Black Run Creek in Evesham Township are among the most pristine reaches of New Jersey's 938,000-acre Pinelands National Reserve. … For more than 1 million people in Burlington County and areas downstream, ecologists say, the Black Run is an essential component of clean drinking water. … Developers are now looking to bulldoze some 800 acres of privately owned land in the Black Run headwaters and build up to 270 new homes. Opponents of the plan, who've collected more than 5,000 signatures against it, say the threat to the Black Run headwaters is proof that long-awaited reforms to better protect Pinelands water can't come fast enough. … 'The good news is that new rules to limit this kind of intrusion are at hand,' [Pinelands Preservation Alliance Executive Director Jaclyn] Rhoads said, in an interview with NJ Spotlight News last week. 'The bad news is that it's taken way too long. Pressure on the aquifer from drought, from brush fires, from overdevelopment is only getting worse.' TESLA CRASH — 'Tesla sued over Model S crash that killed three in New Jersey,' by Reuters' Jonathan Stempel: 'Tesla was sued on Monday by the estates of three people killed last September when their 2024 Model S equipped with Autopilot and Full Self-Driving features crashed on New Jersey's Garden State Parkway. The wrongful death lawsuit filed in the federal court in Camden, New Jersey, attributed the deaths of David Dryerman, 54; his wife Michele, 54; and their daughter Brooke, 17, to the car's 'defective and unreasonably dangerous design.' … The complaint said the car's defective design caused it to stray from its lane of travel and fail to apply emergency braking, resulting in the crash. It also said Tesla failed to warn David Dryerman, who was driving, that his Model S was unsafe, citing Musk's statement in 2016 that Autopilot was 'probably better' than human drivers.' — 'In NJ, suicide rates double for middle-aged men. Why a 'friendship recession' is spreading' —'JCP&L reports more than 14,600 customers without electricity at Shore' —'High school seniors talk prom and that NJ rite of passage: going to the Shore' —'Jonas Brothers, Dana Bash, David Burke headline 2025 New Jersey Hall of Fame class'

North Carolina proposal to ban inland shrimp trawling met with fierce pushback
North Carolina proposal to ban inland shrimp trawling met with fierce pushback

Axios

time32 minutes ago

  • Axios

North Carolina proposal to ban inland shrimp trawling met with fierce pushback

A potential ban on inland shrimp trawling has become one of the most controversial bills moving through North Carolina's state legislature. Why it matters: The proposal, which would ban trawling less than a half-mile off the coast, heats up a long battle between the state's recreational and commercial fishermen. It also pits those opposed to the measure over environmental concerns against others who say a ban would devastate the state's shrimping industry and wipe out jobs. Several hotly debated proposals — including on tax cuts, immigration and gun permitting — have advanced in this year's legislative session, which began in January, but none have caused quite as much of a stir as the state Senate's shrimp trawling measure. Driving the news: The proposal has been met with fierce pushback from commercial fishermen, who catch shrimp in the state's estuaries and sounds. "There's been a war and they're trying to get rid of the commercial sector," Ryan Speckman, co-founder of Locals Seafood, tells Axios, noting the commercial fishing industry in North Carolina is quite small. The big picture: North Carolina is the only state on the eastern seaboard that has yet to ban inshore shrimp trawling, supporters of the legislation note. Proponents argue it's a long overdue change needed to protect natural habitats from "what has long been recognized as one of the most destructive fishing practices in coastal waters," per the North Carolina Wildlife Federation. Shrimp trawling requires dragging heavy nets and chains on the ocean floor, and some methods result in the unintended capture of other species, the federation said. Between the lines: Lawmakers who have supported the legislation faced death threats just days after a Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed, while another Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were injured after they were shot inside their homes. The State Bureau of Investigation arrested a Brunswick County man Friday for threatening Republican Senate Rules Chairman Bill Rabon, per WECT. "All senators in Raleigh need to understand what happened to Melissa Hortman and John Hoffman in Minnesota can happen here in North Carolina," the man said in a Facebook post, the outlet reported. The latest: Amid outcry from the commercial fishing industry and pushback from Republicans and Democrats alike, the Senate advanced a separate bill Monday that would pay commercial fishermen affected by the bill, spending some $10 million to do so over the next five years, WRAL reports. Still, opponents of the legislation gathered in Raleigh Tuesday afternoon to protest the legislation with the backing of House lawmakers from both sides of the aisle. Two lawmakers who are among the most ideologically opposite in the state legislature, Republican Rep. Keith Kidwell, a far-right freedom caucus member, and Democratic Rep. Pricey Harrison, both spoke against the inshore trawling ban, according to WRAL. "Are we going to shut down the people who go to work every day, making an honest living, because some branch of the government finally decides in some slimy backroom deal that they don't want to do this anymore?" Kidwell said. Harrison said that if the legislature was concerned about the environment, it would be talking about water quality, coastal development, wetlands and more, according to WRAL.

Canada's not-so-secret weapon
Canada's not-so-secret weapon

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

Canada's not-so-secret weapon

Presented by Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada Thanks for reading Canada Playbook. In today's edition: → The coolest head in D.C. is Canadian. → C-5 moves to the Senate in a final sprint to Canada Day. → ANITA ANAND flags open questions around NATO timelines. Trade war QUEEN BEE — KIRSTEN HILLMAN has mastered diplomacy in the age of disruption — often under some stressful working conditions. Whether it was visiting Mar-a-Lago with then-Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU, joining MARK CARNEY on his first Oval Office visit, or hosting world leaders in Alberta — Hillman has been there. Now, Canada's ambassador to the U.S. has been tapped by the PM to serve as Canada's chief negotiator in talks President DONALD TRUMP in pursuit of a new economic and security deal. She'll also continue to serve as Ottawa's envoy. 'That post is the No. 1 post for any prime minister to appoint somebody to,' said FLAVIO VOLPE, the president of Canada's Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association. 'The fact that a new prime minister, who's come essentially from the outside looking in, has decided to extend her [time] should be taken as a very serious vote of confidence.' Volpe and Hillman are on the Council on Canada-U.S. Relations put together by TRUDEAU. Carney kept the council intact, though it hasn't formally met since Ottawa entered into 'serious negotiations' with the Americans, Volpe said. — Diplomacy 101: With a change in government, the council had advised Carney to keep Hillman where she is, given her work ethic, connections and institutional knowledge. 'Let's not make changes for change's sake,' Volpe told Playbook. 'She has done an exemplary job in Washington in terms of getting the Canadian interest across in a highly charged, political environment without offending anybody.' — No pressure: Hillman is working directly with her counterpart, U.S. Trade Representative JAMIESON GREER, on the deal. They're no strangers. The two worked together during negotiations for the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. She's also often seen with Canada-U.S. Trade Minister DOMINIC LEBLANC coming out of Greer's office building in D.C., as they attempt to hammer out an agreement, sometimes with Commerce Secretary HOWARD LUTNICK. — Made for the moment: Those who know Hillman say she is one of Canada's most credible and capable voices on the world stage. JODY THOMAS, former deputy minister of national defense, called Hillman 'the perfect person to be in the role, at this moment in history.' 'She's smart, she's analytical, she understands how to work with our partners and interlocutors in the United States. And she understands the trade file extraordinarily well,' Thomas said to Playbook. 'And when tensions are heightened and emotions are high, her calm and kind demeanor really makes a difference.' — The exception to the rule: Hillman has been in D.C. for 9 years, first as deputy ambassador then ambassador. There's no fixed term, but her predecessors rarely lasted that long. Before that, she was Canada's chief negotiator for the Trans-Pacific Partnership. She's worked in Washington under presidents BARACK OBAMA, TRUMP, JOE BIDEN and Trump 2.0 — all while guarding against their protectionist policies. 'I don't succumb to frustration,' she previously told POLITICO. — It shows: As Canada's first female ambassador to the U.S., she's spent years building relationships, managing crises and advising Cabinet. She's also pushed Canadian interests outside the White House and deep into red-state America — one spreadsheet and one handshake at a time. As of December, she'd met with 42 U.S. governors. — Breaking the glass ceiling: Her service in the role showcases Canada's values on the world stage, said TABATHA BULL, CEO of the Canadian Council for Indigenous Business. 'She continues to set a powerful example as a strong female diplomat,' Bull told Playbook in a statement. 'Canada's decision to stand behind her leadership sends an important message about the value we place on experienced, principled and diverse representation on the world stage.' → New envoys on the block: Premier WAB KINEW has tapped RICHARD MADAN as Manitoba's next trade representative to the United States. 'I'm an American. I'm also Canadian, and this sounds corny, but you just kind of want to help,' the former journalist told the Winnipeg Free Press. Also at work is NATHAN COOPER, Alberta's new rep in Washington. 'What a rocket ride,' he said of the job. BEHIND THE SCENES — Three Cabinet members have been deputized by Trump to lead trade talks — Commerce Secretary LUTNICK, Treasury Secretary SCOTT BESSENT and U.S. Trade Representative GREER. — Three is a crowd: A POLITICO team led by DANIEL DESROCHERS, MEGAN MESSERLY and ARI HAWKINS report that the officials are bumping into each other — and gumming up negotiations. — Progress report: 'Trump's three-headed negotiating team is often working at cross purposes, or at least that's how it seems to 11 foreign officials, business leaders and advisers on trade talks, who say they are receiving mixed messages from different departments, in what one person close to the talks described as a contest for Trump's loyalty.' The story notes that the most experienced negotiator, Greer, is the farthest from Trump's ear. → Keep reading on the state of talks. DRIVING THE DAY TWO BECOMING FIVE — As Prime Minister CARNEY often says, you're either at the table or you're on the menu. That brings us to the leaders' dinner that opened the NATO summit in The Hague last night, which no doubt offered many chewy discussion points, including TRUMP's convulsive peacemaking attempts with Iran and Israel. Brussels Playbook author TIM ROSS sets the scene: 'Everyone's just hoping the U.S. president appreciated his evening among the gold chandeliers and frescos of the Dutch king's palace enough not to quit the alliance due to being, in general, just totally pissed at the state of the entire goddamn world.' — Trump's main course: NATO defense spending. — Amuse-bouche: Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand predicted an active discussion among the 32 NATO leaders, especially about the timelines on how the alliance's countries will meet the new 5 percent spending target. Canada just announced plans to reach the soon-to-be-outdated 2 percent benchmark. — For starters: Driven by Trump's long-standing demand for allies to do more, NATO must now reach a consensus on how to get to 5 percent. The proposal allocates 3.5 percent to military spending and 1.5 percent to defense-related industry and infrastructure. — Hmm, how about: 'It's not only a question of the amount — whether it is an additional 1.5 percent or an additional 3 percent overall,' Anand told POLITICO from The Hague. 'It's also a question of how you break it down.' — More questions: 'Will there be flexibility in, about 1.5 percent? Will there be a mandatory percentage increase at certain points in time? Will there be increases incrementally, and will there be a review after certain timelines, say, in 2029 — one of the dates that is being floated?' — In related news: The new NATO military spending target will require Canada to spend C$150-billion annually on defence-related priorities, Carney said Tuesday. — Talk of the town: Spain looks poised to take the spotlight off Canada as one of NATO's biggest laggards. Carney's pledge to meet the 2 percent commitment appeared likely to get Canada off the hook this year. Now it seems certain given that calls for a carve-out from Spanish PM PEDRO SÁNCHEZ's have made his country the 'villain' of the summit. → NATO reads from POLITICO: — 'The Trump summit': Rubio credits president for pushing NATO allies. — Zelenskyy clings to NATO hopes as Trump meeting looms. — Inside the air policing mission keeping NATO leaders safe. — Trump plans to tout Iran strikes at NATO summit focused on European defense spending. ON THE HILL THE FINISH LINE — CARNEY's signature piece of legislation is on the agenda today as the Senate returns to action. The PM has promised C-5 will offset TRUMP's tariffs and that removing internal trade regulations will contribute C$200 billion to the Canadian economy. Backed by Conservatives, the sweeping 'nation-building' bill cleared the House on Friday and is on track to become law by Canada Day — just as the prime minister vowed. — Three more hurdles: Today in the Senate, the bill will be introduced. Senators will get the chance to debate the bill during second reading. — Now what: The bill must pass three readings in the Senate before it can become law. But it won't face a routine committee review. — Crunch time: The Red Chamber is treating Bill C-5 as urgent legislation, as senators face political pressure to pass it by Friday before summer recess begins. Senators pre-studied C-5 last week, taking time to question Internal Trade Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister LEBLANC and Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister REBECCA ALTY. But if the bill hasn't passed third reading by Friday at 5:15 p.m., Senate Speaker RAYMONDE GAGNÉ will force a final vote. — Also on deck: This week, senators are also expected to approve more than C$158 billion in government spending for the 2025–2026 fiscal year that ends March 31. THE ROOMS THAT MATTER — Prime Minister MARK CARNEY is at the NATO Summit where his Wednesday-morning agenda included meetings with New Zealand PM CHRISTOPHER LUXON and Estonian PM KRISTEN MICHAL. He also attended a welcome by NATO Secretary-General MARK RUTTE and Netherlands PM DICK SCHOOF before a meeting of the North Atlantic Council. He has meetings lined up with KYRIAKOS MITSOTAKIS, the PM of Greece, and ALEXANDER STUBB, president of Finland. He's scheduled to hold a media avail at 2:30 p.m. local time (8:30 a.m. in Ottawa). — Energy Minister TIM HODGSON will deliver a keynote address and participate in a noon hour fireside chat with the Toronto Region Board of Trade. — AI and Digital Innovation Minister EVAN SOLOMON will be at the Vector Institute (Schwartz Reisman Innovation Campus in Toronto) to make a 1 p.m. announcement in support of AI-driven health care solutions. — Defense Minister DAVID MCGUINTY is in Latvia. Want more POLITICO? Download our mobile app to save stories, get notifications on U.S.-Canada relations, and more. In iOS or Android . MORNING MUST-CLICKS — 'Carney doesn't appear to have a grand theory of public service reform — but change is happening anyway,' KATHRYN MAY writes in Policy Options. 'The system is being reshaped piece by piece, not by design, but by the demands of what he's trying to get done.' — And ROBERT FIFE of the Globe reports: 'Carney ready to dismiss top bureaucrats unable to meet his expectations, Liberal insiders say.' — POILIEVRE takes questions on a special edition of the 'Hub Dialogues' with SEAN SPEER. — 'As aggressive as Carney has been to date—zeroing out the carbon tax rate, leading the new Parliament with a personal income tax cut bill, promising to meet the NATO target of 2 percent of GDP on military spending by March—from here on out, things will only get tougher,' DAVID MOSCROP writes in The Walrus. — Liberal MP NATE ERSKINE-SMITH is on the latest episode of 'The Backbench.' — MARIE WOOLF of the Globe reports that child-safety advocates and technology experts are urging the federal government to bring back the online harms bill, but to split it in two to expedite measures that protect children from abuse. PROZONE Our latest Pro PM Canada subscriber newsletter: Canada and NATO's new target. Other headlines for Pro subscribers: — Gavi's vaccine summit faces funding test as US cuts, defense spending loom. — Saudis, US drive strife inside global climate science body. — U.S. agencies reported over 2,000 use cases of AI. — Fears grow EU will cave on tech rules amid Trump pressure. — European Commission threatens to kill forest protection law. — As Trump fumes, Powell tells lawmakers he's in no rush to lower rates. PLAYBOOKERS Birthdays: Finance Minister FRANÇOIS-PHILIPPE CHAMPAGNE is 55 today. Former Sen. ROMÉO DALLAIRE, ROBERT ROSENFELD of GreenShield and former MP LINDA FRANCIS DUNCAN also celebrate today. And HBD to the amazing WILLA PLANK, an editor of Canada Playbook. Movers and shakers: MOHAMMAD KAMAL is director of communications for Treasury Board President SHAFQAT ALI. Spotted: Maine Gov. JANET MILLS, on a three-day charm offensive to Canada. CP has the details. Canada's SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER, showed up to the Oklahoma City Thunder's NBA championship parade with a Canadian flag around his waist … OKC Mayor Mayor DAVID HOLT, naming July 30th after the athlete from Hamilton, Ontario. Noted: 'Run Like A Girl,' a memoir by former Environment Minister CATHERINE MCKENNA will be published Sept. 23 in North America with Sutherland House. Lobby watch: Marinvest Energy Canada posted a June 17 meeting with Conservative Party Leader PIERRE POILIEVRE and Conservative MP and Quebec Lieutenant PIERRE PAUL-HUS … Indigenous Water Partnership posted a June 23 meeting with Conservative MP BILLY MORIN … Environmental Defense Fund reported a June 23 meeting with Liberal MP ERIC ST-PIERRE. Media mentions: The Radio Television Digital News Foundation announced its scholarships for the 2024-2025 academic year. TRIVIA Tuesday's answer: In 1955, GEORGE IGNATIEFF and LESTER B. PEARSON participated in a drinking contest with the Soviet leader NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV where the Canadians downed 18 shots of vodka. Props to BRANDON WALLACE, GREG LYNDON, RODDY MCFALL, TOBY HARPER-MERRETT, JANE GRIFFITH, ANDREW SZENDE, SEAN SUNDERLAND, ALEXANDER LANDRY, JOSEPH CRESSATTI, RONALD LEMIEUX, ASHLEY THOMSON, SHAUGHN MCARTHUR, JOHN MATHESON, JOANNA PLATER, ELIZABETH BURN, RAY DEL BIANCO, MARC SHAW, PAUL PARK, GARY ALLEN, JOSEPH PLANTA, J. ROLLAND VAIVE, JOHN PEPPER, ADAM SMITH, CHRIS RANDS, MARCEL MARCOTTE and JEFFREY VALOIS. Props +1 to EVAN CATHCART. Wednesday's question: Who said the following? 'I found the biggest challenge was the Ottawa Press Gallery. The people who cover politics all the time were the worst. Regional journalists were not so much of a problem. … But the Ottawa Press Gallery really feels like they own the politics.' For bonus marks: Tell us how your answer connects to this date in history. Answers to canadaplaybook@ Writing tomorrow's Playbook: MICKEY DJURIC and MIKE BLANCHFIELD. Canada Playbook would not happen without: Canada Editor Sue Allan, editor Willa Plank and POLITICO's Grace Maalouf.

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