
Blackburn, Carr aide headed back to K Street
FIRST IN PI — SUSSKIND JOINING ACG: Jamie Susskind, a tech policy veteran who most recently served as Sen. Marsha Blackburn's legislative director, is returning to K Street, where she'll be a partner at ACG Advocacy.
— Susskind has spent the past four years working alongside the Tennessee Republican as Blackburn was at the forefront of some of the Hill's recent tech policy fights — including over the artificial intelligence moratorium in the reconciliation bill and kids' online safety. Before joining Blackburn's office, Susskind was vice president of policy and regulatory affairs at the Consumer Technology Association and worked at the FCC, where she served as chief of staff to current Chair Brendan Carr.
— One of the biggest factors that drew Susskind to ACG was the reputation of the firm's intellectual property practice, she said. (Editor's note: ACG lobbies for POLITICO's parent company, Axel Springer, on copyright issues, according to disclosure filings.)
— Blackburn has been a leader on AI copyright bills, due in part to the senator's close ties to the entertainment industry back in Tennessee. 'The intersection of AI and intellectual property has been a big thing, and I know that ACG has been very engaged on those issues, so I'm hopeful I can continue doing that and working with the creative community on those issues,' Susskind told PI.
— Susskind also envisions helping ACG's clients navigate Carr's FCC as the agency — and its outspoken leader — work through how to tackle a range of ever-evolving technologies. 'I'm hopeful that … I can work with clients to give them an understanding of where the Carr office might fall on things, what the commission might do, what the different options are,' she said.
Happy Thursday and welcome to PI. Send tips, questions, complaints: Add me on Signal at caitlinoprysko.17, email me at coprysko@politico.com, and be sure to follow me on X: @caitlinoprysko.
SELLING THE MEGABILL: 'The conservative group Americans for Prosperity is launching a $6 million campaign to support messaging in support of the megabill, including digital and TV ad buys, touting some of the bill's popular provisions,' POLITICO's Andrew Howard scoops.
— The ad buy comes as lawmakers trickle back home for the August recess, where they will work to sell the domestic policy law — which the Koch-backed group previously pledged $20 million in spending to get over the finish line — by promoting its extension of tax breaks and funding for immigration enforcement while beating back attacks on issues like the bill's Medicaid cuts. The campaign 'includes a new 30-second spot that touts 'growing our economy' and 'keeping our country safe,' as well as events with lawmakers across the country' during the recess.
LEANING INTO MAHA: The leading trade group for the medical device industry is hitching its wagon to the Make America Healthy Again movement popularized by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as part of a new six-figure public affairs campaign launched this week.
— The campaign from AdvaMed featured a full-page ad in Wednesday's Washington Times as well as an op-ed from CEO Scott Whitaker heralding the ways medtech can help with Kennedy's mission to drastically cut down on chronic disease in America.
— While Kennedy's quest is rooted in deep skepticism of corporate power over both health and nutrition policy, the secretary has also called for a greater embrace of wearable health technology. Meanwhile at a White House summit Wednesday, President Donald Trump tasked dozens of tech and health companies with creating a nationwide network with which patients can access and track health records, which won plaudits from AdvaMed.
— But the medtech industry has been raising alarms for months about the potential impacts of Trump's tariff policies, which Whitaker told Congress this spring could snarl the industry's fragile supply chains and end up increasing costs for one of the industry's biggest customers: the federal government.
— Whitaker told PI today that there were several promising developments on trade over the past few weeks, but he has stressed the need for 'flexibility' for the industry, as well as speedier Food and Drug Administration approvals and improved reimbursement from programs like Medicare and Medicaid.
— 'Our mission is — and always has been — to help make Americans healthy, and it is the core of what we do as medtech across so many different categories of care,' Whitaker said in an interview. As for the timing of the campaign, 'it struck me as a good time to remind public policy makers about who we are, what medtech does, and what value it brings to a healthier society,' he added.
GOLDMAN TAPS NEW CHIEF LOBBYIST: 'Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s chief global lobbyist, Michael Paese, is moving on after 16 years and will be replaced by a lifelong Republican at the helm of a team pushing the Wall Street bank's policy goals on the Trump administration,' Bloomberg's Todd Gillespie reports.
— 'Paese, a 58-year-old former Democratic lawyer, will be succeeded by Michael Thompson, who worked for two Republican senators and a congressman from the party earlier in his career. The change comes at a time when banks are pushing for lighter regulation from President Donald Trump's administration, which has pledged to ease their capital requirements but also announced tariffs that have roiled markets.'
— Thompson joined Goldman in 2010 and most recently served as a managing director and the bank's head of U.S. government affairs. Before that, he worked for the financial services-focused lobbying firm Rich Feuer Anderson, as well as for mortgage giant Fannie Mae and for former Sens. Mike Enzi and Sam Brownback.
— The bank is also promoting Kyle Russ to lead its prudential policy and strategy, and Ryan Jachym to lead markets policy.
MENDING TIES: Trump appears to have patched things up with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, with whom the president has met twice over the past two months, according to the Wall Street Journal's Alexander Saeedy and AnnaMaria Andriotis.
— The most recent confab — which came on the heels of a yearslong rift between Dimon and Trump — took place in the Oval Office last week and included Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Per the Journal, the group discussed trade deals, affordable housing, and even the participants' diverging views on Fed Chair Jerome Powell's job performance and interest rates.
DOUBLE TROUBLE: Cryptocurrency billionaires Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss pressed Trump over the weekend to dump his nominee to lead the CFTC, Brian Quintenz, POLITICO's Declan Harty and Sophia Cai report.
— 'The Facebook-famous billionaires, who now run the crypto company Gemini, reached out to Trump directly with concerns about Quintenz' ahead of a Monday procedural vote on his nomination to lead the small but powerful Wall Street regulator, per people familiar with the matter.
— Despite initially praising the nomination on social media this year, the brothers complained about 'Quintenz's recent testimony suggesting he would support expanding the CFTC's budget to account for new responsibilities in crypto regulation,' which the brothers pointed to to argue that Quintenz might not be sufficiently aligned with Trump's agenda.
— 'The Senate Agriculture Committee scrapped its vote to advance Quintenz's nomination on Monday at the White House's request,' and while the White House maintains Quintenz is still the nominee, the ordeal demonstrates the level of power some in the crypto industry feel they wield in Trump's Washington — less than three years after the implosion of FTX made the industry a political pariah.
Jobs report
— Dan Curran is now senior director for global government relations at RTX. He was most recently senior director for legislative affairs at Sierra Space and is an alum of McKinsey, Boeing and Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.).
— Tara Rabin has joined Context Strategies as a senior adviser. She was previously FDA's longtime media relations director.
— Sarah Whitworth is now a senior vice president at CURA Strategies. She was most recently a vice president at GMMB.
— Airports Council International-North America has promoted Amanda La Joie to senior director of government and political affairs, Holly Christian to director of office services and administration and Molly Babitz to manager of communications and marketing.
— David 'Woody' Woodruff has joined Canadian government relations firm Rubicon Strategy as an associate. He was previously head of U.S. public and government affairs at CN Railway and is an Archer Daniels Midland, BP America and Hill alum.
— Breyon Williams has joined Groundwork Collaborative as its new chief economist. Williams was previously a researcher at Mathematica and also has been a lecturer at American University.
— McKinsey D.C. is bringing on Brent Perry as director of federal affairs and Megan Becker as manager of political affairs and leader of their new PAC. Perry previously was a senior leader on the federal affairs team at Eastman Chemical. Becker previously was finance director at the NRSC.
— Paul Lewis is joining the government relations team at the International Fresh Produce Association as part of IFPA's restructuring. Lewis was previously vice president of food safety standards and regulatory compliance.
— Mirela Gavrilas is now Elementl Power's vice president of regulatory affairs. She was previously the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's executive director of operations.
— Jordan Ebert has joined Mastercard as director of U.S. government affairs. He most recently served as banking and consumer finance counsel to the Senate Banking Committee.
— Aaron Scherb is now chief congressional adviser at Democracy Defenders Action, leading a new Stop Corruption Now project. He previously was senior director of legislative affairs at Common Cause.
— Iliana Owen-Alcala is now coordinator of the Emerging Leaders Council at the Steamboat Institute. She previously interned at the Washington Examiner.
New Joint Fundraisers
Lateefah Victory Fund (Rep. Lateefah Simon, On the Move PAC)
JF unauth (Textron Inc. Political Action Committee, Physician-Led Healthcare For America Political Action Committee (PHA PAC))
Virginia Senate Victory 2026 (Sen. Mark Warner, DSCC)
New PACs
American Covenant PAC (Super PAC)
Forge PAC (Hybrid PAC)
Forward America Inc. (Super PAC)
North Carolina First (Leadership PAC: Michael Whatley)
Possibilities PAC (Hybrid PAC)
New Lobbying REGISTRATIONS
Az Dc Consulting, LLC: City Of Surprise
Black Diamond Strategies LLC: Atlas Strategic Assets Inc.
Capitol Pathway Advisors LLC: Firearms Policy Coalition
Cgcn Group, LLC: Primient
Esp Advisors, LLC: Cornell Atkinson Center For Sustainability, Cornell University
Forward Global: Echostar Corporation/Dba Dish
Forward Global: National Wooden Pallet & Container Association
Greenberg Traurig, LLP: Impact Health Sharing
Holman Strategies LLC: Saxa Innovation LLC (On Behalf Of D Initiatives LLC)
Ikon Public Affairs: Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center
Meridian 535 Strategies: University Of Florida
National Consumer Reporting Association: National Consumer Reporting Association
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: American Hotel And Lodging Association
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: General Motors LLC
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: Haas Automation, Inc.
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: Information Technology Industry Council
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: Oracle America, Inc.
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: The Home Depot, Inc.
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: Traeger Pellet Grills, LLC
Sightline Advocacy, LLC: Tsmc Arizona
Thorn Run Partners: Evolution Iq
Washington Advocacy Group: Capitol Counsel, LLC On Behalf Of Saracen Development LLC
New Lobbying Terminations
Alpha Strategies, LLC: Firearms Regulatory Accountability Coalition, Inc. - Frac
Alpha Strategies, LLC: Nst Global, LLC
Behrco: Bridgeway Academy
Forbes-Tate: Shein Technology LLC
Meridian 535 Strategies: Dynepic, Inc.
Silver Legal Services LLC: City Of Ketchikan
Washington Advocacy Group: Okayd
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
14 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Trump Criticizes Taylor Swift In Sydney Sweeney Rant
President Donald Trump is continuing to respond very normally to news that Sydney Sweeney is a registered Republican. The actor found herself amid backlash following her "great jeans" American Eagle ad, in which she said, 'Genes are passed down from parent to offspring, often determining traits like eye color, personality, and even hair color. My jeans are blue." Given the political climate, some criticized the ad as a racist "dog whistle." This weekend, BuzzFeed was the first major outlet to confirm that Sydney is registered as a Republican in Florida, according to publicly available voter registration records. When Trump was seemingly told about her registration in an interview this morning, he responded, 'She's a registered Republican? Oh, now I love her ad!' Shortly after the interview, Trump hit Truth Social with another take: "Sydney Sweeney, a registered Republican, has the 'HOTTEST' ad out there. It's for American Eagle, and the jeans are 'flying off the shelves.' Go get 'em Sydney!" Indeed, Sydney's Ultra Wide-Leg Jean is currently listed as out of stock on American Eagle's website. Interestingly, the success of American Eagle sub-brand Aerie has been attributed to its emphasis on diversity in its branding. Trump compared the ad to car company Jaguar's viral "Copy Nothing" campaign last year, which featured a diverse selection of models and was branded "woke" by the right: "On the other side of the ledger, Jaguar did a stupid, and seriously WOKE advertisement, THAT IS A TOTAL DISASTER! The CEO just resigned in disgrace, and the company is in absolute turmoil. Who wants to buy a Jaguar after looking at that disgraceful ad." He further evoked the Bud Light boycotts, which began after transgender TikToker Dylan Mulvaney posted a less-than-a-minute-long video on Instagram promoting the company's giveaway. The President wrote, "Shouldn't they have learned a lesson from Bud Lite, which went Woke and essentially destroyed, in a short campaign, the Company. The market cap destruction has been unprecedented, with BILLIONS OF DOLLARS SO FOOLISHLY LOST." "Or just look at Woke singer Taylor Swift," he continued, taking another shot at the singer. "Ever since I alerted the world as to what she was by saying on TRUTH that I can't stand her (HATE!). She was booed out of the Super Bowl and became, NO LONGER HOT. The tide has seriously turned — Being WOKE is for losers, being Republican is what you want to be. Thank you for your attention to this matter!" Similarly, Trump posted (unprovoked) back in May, "Has anyone noticed that, since I said 'I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT,' she's no longer 'HOT?'" It's worth noting that Taylor is reportedly enjoying some downtime after her record-breaking Eras tour. Cool! Very normal stuff from the President!

Politico
16 minutes ago
- Politico
Gov. Greg Abbott's options to force a redistricting vote are more limited than they appear
'Come and take it,' dared state Rep. Gene Wu, the Texas House Democratic Caucus leader, in an appearance Monday morning on CNN. Wu declared Abbott's threat to be 'all bluster.' The governor's threat is rooted in a nonbinding legal opinion issued in 2021 by Attorney General Ken Paxton, amid the last attempt by Democrats to break quorum. Paxton, notably, took no position on whether breaking quorum is constitutional. The republican AG also declined to say whether fleeing Democrats could or should be removed from office. Rather, he called it a 'fact question for a court' that he said was beyond the scope of his office to decide. He noted instead that he could file what are known as 'quo warranto actions' in court, asking a judge to determine whether the missing lawmakers had officially vacated their seats. How would a judge make that call? Paxton said he wasn't certain. 'We find no constitutional provision or statute establishing an exhaustive list for why a vacancy occurs or the grounds under which an officer may be judicially removed from office,' he wrote. How long could it take Abbott to force the Legislature back into session? This is the most uncertain aspect of Abbott's gambit. Paxton's office would need to file 'quo warranto' actions in various judicial districts for more than 50 fleeing lawmakers. Judges may take up these cases on different timelines and reach different conclusions, requiring appeals that could wind their way to the Texas Supreme Court. Paxton acknowledged in an interview with conservative podcaster Benny Johnson that the timeline would be problematic. 'The challenge is that [it] wouldn't necessarily be an immediate answer, right?' he said. 'We'd have to go through the court process, and we'd have to file … in districts that are not friendly to Republicans,' Paxton said. 'So it's a challenge because every, every district would be different. We'd have to go sue in every legislator's home district to try to execute on that idea.' And even if Abbott and Paxton win a clean sweep in removing the Democrats from office, it would then require a time-intensive process of calling special elections to fill the vacancies — and guaranteeing that the winners of those elections also remain in the state as well. That timing matters when the GOP-led redistricting plan is on a fixed timeline: A new map must be adopted by early December in order to be in place for the 2026 midterm cycle. That would require Democrats to remain out of state for about four months while they accumulate $500-per-day civil fines. The current special Legislative session is slated to end on Aug. 19, but Abbott could call another one. Could the Democrats be charged with crimes? Abbott's letter, though sharply critical, stopped short of actually accusing Democrats of breaking the law. Rather, he suggested that if outsiders are helping them fundraise to cover their fines, they might run afoul of bribery laws. 'It would be bribery if any lawmaker took money to perform or to refuse to perform an act in the legislature,' Abbott said in a Fox News interview Monday. 'And the reports are these legislators have both sought money and offered money to skip the vote, to leave the legislature, to take a legislative act.' If Texas prosecutors in fact level any such charges, then Abbott's authority to return them grows stronger. He could then ask courts in Texas and Illinois to seek the return of the missing lawmakers. 'I will use my full extradition authority to demand the return to Texas of any potential out-of-state felons,' he said in his Sunday statement. Liz Crampton contributed reporting.


CNN
33 minutes ago
- CNN
Texas governor warns Democrats who left state
Texas governor warns Democrats who left state Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) threatened to remove Democrats from the state House if they don't return by 3 PM today. Texas House Democrats left the state to try and block an aggressively partisan redrawing of the state's congressional map orchestrated by Republicans with the support of President Donald Trump. 01:16 - Source: CNN Reporters ask Trump about firing labor stats chief over jobs numbers President Donald Trump has fired Dr. Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, whom he accused, without evidence, of manipulating the monthly jobs reports for 'political purposes.' 00:35 - Source: CNN Will President Trump release the Epstein files? CNN's Paula Reid explains the latest information on whether President Trump will release the Epstein files after the Trump administration backtracked on its promise to release additional materials in the investigation. 01:30 - Source: CNN GOP candidate deflects direct questions on past Trump comments CNN's Manu Raju presses Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, the GOP nominee for Virginia governor, on critical comments she's made in the past about President Donald Trump, who has yet to endorse her campaign. 02:55 - Source: CNN Corp. for Public Broadcasting to shutter after Trump funding cuts The Corporation for Public Broadcasting announced that it will wind down its operations due to the successful Republican effort to defund local PBS and NPR stations across the country. CNN's Brian Stelter reports. 01:45 - Source: CNN Smithsonian removes reference to Trump impeachment The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History last month removed a board that referenced President Donald Trump's two impeachments from an exhibit on the American presidency. 01:15 - Source: CNN The politics behind Trump's historic tariffs President Trump has announced historic US tariffs on countries across the globe. CNN's Kevin Liptak breaks down Trump's motives for imposing the new trade deals. 01:30 - Source: CNN Three things to know about Trump's new tariffs President Trump has announced a slew of new tariffs on America's trading partners. But what does that really mean for US consumers, and America's relationships with its allies? And will these new measures be implemented at all? CNN's Anna Cooban explains. 01:34 - Source: CNN GOP lawmaker faces raucous crowd in Wisconsin Republican Rep. Bryan Steil faced tough questions and booing by attendees of a town-hall style event in Wisconsion. Audience members confronted Steil on topics including the economy, immigration policy, and the war in Gaza. 02:08 - Source: CNN Biden warns country is facing 'dark days' under Trump During the National Bar Association's annual gala in Chicago, former President Joe Biden warned that the country is facing 'dark days' under President Donald Trump's watch, saying the executive branch 'seems to be doing its best to dismantle the Constitution.' 01:12 - Source: CNN Harris gives Colbert her first interview since losing election Former Vice President Kamala Harris reflected on her decision not to pursue a gubernatorial run in California, citing systemic dysfunction, while speaking in an interview on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert." 00:44 - Source: CNN Virginia Giuffre family's message to Trump about Ghislaine Maxwell pardon CNN's Kaitlan Collins speaks with the family of late Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein's sex-trafficking accusers, about their response to President Trump potentially pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell. 00:50 - Source: CNN Kerrville mayor admits to missing emergency briefing call CNN's Shimon Prokupecz speaks with Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. about not seeing emails regarding an emergency preparation call before the deadly July 4 floods. 01:47 - Source: CNN $200 million 'Trump-style' ballroom coming to the White House Construction for a new ballroom on the White House campus will begin in September on a $200 million, 90,000-square-foot ballroom, fulfilling a 15-year ambition by President Trump to construct an event space on the White House grounds that expands the building's entertaining capacity. 01:16 - Source: CNN Trump's tariff deadline looms over world economy President Trump's self-imposed midnight deadline is rapidly approaching for countries to strike a trade framework with the United States or face significantly higher tariffs. In a new development today, President Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on higher tariffs on Mexico. 01:26 - Source: CNN Trump's tariffs might make coffee in the US more expensive CNN's Isa Soares examines Trump's proposed tariffs on Brazil, and how it may impact coffee prices once they go into effect. 01:34 - Source: CNN US diminished a key weapons stockpile fighting Iran The US used about a quarter of its supply of high-end missile interceptors during the Israel-Iran war, exposing a gap in supplies, and raising concerns about US global security posture. CNN's Tamara Qiblawi reports. 01:35 - Source: CNN Education Dept. resumes collecting student loans in default The Department of Education will start sending federal student loans in default to collections again, ending a pandemic-era pause that began roughly five years ago. CNN's Sunlen Serfaty explains what you need to know. 01:42 - Source: CNN Democrats cite arcane law in letter demanding Epstein files CNN congressional correspondent Lauren Fox explains how a law from the 1920s could help Senate Democrats on the Homeland Security Committee access to the Epstein files. 01:31 - Source: CNN Tapper presses Pelosi on Trump's insider trading allegations CNN's Jake Tapper spoke to former House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), who reacted to President Donald Trump accusing Pelosi and her husband of insider trading, calling the allegation "ridiculous." 01:08 - Source: CNN