Tag: retreat

  • GOP senators to join Trump for Mar-a-Lago dinner ahead of campaign wing retreat

    GOP senators to join Trump for Mar-a-Lago dinner ahead of campaign wing retreat

    Most of the Senate Republican conference will dine with President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate on Friday evening as the lawmakers prepare for a weekend campaign retreat. 

    The dinner between Trump and the GOP senators was confirmed by several sources to Fox News Digital. 

    Also in Florida, many of the senators will be attending the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) retreat afterward. The committee is preparing for the 2026 midterm election cycle. 

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    Trump is hosting the senators at Mar-a-Lago. (Getty Images)

    While most of the GOP conference will be at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago dinner, not all of the senators are going. 

    Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., will instead be at dinner with his daughter, who lives in the area. 

    Cassidy has had a fractured relationship with Trump in the past, as one of the handful of Republican senators who voted to convict him for allegedly inciting the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. 

    LEADER THUNE BACKS SENATE GOP BID TO SPEED PAST HOUSE ON TRUMP BUDGET PLAN

    Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La.

    Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., is up for re-election in 2026. (Reuters)

    The Louisiana Republican is notably up for re-election in 2026 and will be at the NRSC retreat for the remainder of the weekend. While Cassidy’s state isn’t likely to pick a Democrat, he faces threats of primary challenges from the right. 

    The office of moderate Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, whose race will be one of the NRSC’s most competitive this cycle, did not provide comment to Fox News Digital when asked whether she would be at the Mar-a-Lago dinner. 

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    Susan Collins speaking to reporters

    Collins has a reputation as a moderate Republican. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Republicans will be put on defense in 2026 in key states North Carolina and Maine, protecting the seats of Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Collins, respectively. At the same time, the party is looking to expand its majority in the Senate, eyeing vulnerable Democrat-held seats in Georgia and Michigan. 

    FORMER GOP LEADER MCCONNELL FALLS WHILE EXITING SENATE CHAMBER AFTER TURNER CONFIRMATION VOTE

    Jon Ossoff

    Ossoff is seeking a second term in Georgia. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

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    Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Georgia, is seeking re-election in swing state Georgia for the first time. Michigan is already a swing state, and with Democratic Sen. Gary Peters’ announcement that he isn’t running again, the party is losing an incumbent advantage. 

  • Anxious Republicans demand action from House leaders as GOP retreat ends without budget plan

    Anxious Republicans demand action from House leaders as GOP retreat ends without budget plan

    DORAL, Fla. — The House GOP’s three-day annual retreat has ended without public progress on Republicans’ budget reconciliation plans, and some lawmakers are getting nervous about falling behind schedule.

    “After two days at our House Republican winter retreat, we still do not have a plan on budget reconciliation and our Speaker and his team have not offered one,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wrote on X Wednesday morning.

    “Basically, just get started doing something. We have only been presented with the same policy and budget cut proposals that we have been presented with for a month now at all our meetings and at a full Saturday conference meeting earlier this month.”

    Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told reporters on Tuesday that an initial “blueprint” would be “prepared by tomorrow, by the time we leave.” 

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    House Republicans are anxiously watching Speaker Mike Johnson. (Getty Images)

    The budget reconciliation process allows the majority party in the House and Senate, in this case Republicans, to pass a broad-ranging conservative policy overhaul, provided the contents are relevant to the budget and other fiscal matters. It does so by lowering the threshold for passage in the Senate from 60 votes to 51.

    It starts with a budget resolution that includes instructions for specific committees to work toward changes to fiscal policy law under their respective jurisdictions, including topline numbers.

    When asked by reporters about whether he expects those broad toplines to emerge on Wednesday morning, Johnson said, “We’ll be getting to that final number. What we’ve emphasized, with our group, is that we want to have some flexibility in the how the instructions are given to the committees.”

    “Stay tuned for the number. It will be substantial, because it has to be. I mean, we have a $36 trillion federal debt, and we’re committing that in this process. Anything we do is going to be deficit neutral at least or deficit-reducing,” he said.

    WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT DOGE AND ITS QUEST TO SLASH GOVERNMENT WASTE, SPENDING

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene

    U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., criticized the House GOP retreat for a lack of progress. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

    Johnson said later in the press conference, “The objective is to, by the time we leave here today, to have a blueprint that will inform the budget committee for when they work on that budget resolution.”

    The details and parameters of that blueprint are not immediately clear.

    By Wednesday afternoon, however, a majority of lawmakers who were staying at President Donald Trump’s golf resort in Doral, Florida left without a sense of their next steps.

    “I think the general feeling is leadership needs to make a play call and start executing on it,” one House GOP lawmaker told Fox News Digital. 

    Asked if they were optimistic about leaders making that call soon, the lawmaker said, “They better if they want to get this done.”

    Another House Republican said the meetings were “productive” but with a caveat — “as long as leadership takes our input, ideas and concerns seriously.”

    Trump and the RNC announce a $76 million fundraising haul in April

    President Donald Trump also spoke at the GOP retreat. (Donald Trump 2024 campaign)

    Other GOP lawmakers signaled they were exasperated by weeks of “listening sessions” among Republicans that have not led to specific directives from House leaders.

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    But Johnson was confident that the House Budget Committee would have its “blueprint” to work from when Congress is back “when we return to the hill” – which is next week.

    “That’s going to happen, and we’ll get it through the whole chamber, and we’ll be voting on that by late February,” he said.

  • Vance preaches unity to House Republicans as tensions boil at Trump retreat

    Vance preaches unity to House Republicans as tensions boil at Trump retreat

    DORAL, Fla. — Vice President JD Vance urged Republicans to stick together during a closed-door meeting at the House GOP annual issues conference on Tuesday, as tensions simmer over some lawmakers’ decisions to skip the multi-day event.

    House Republicans are at President Donald Trump’s golf course and resort in Doral, Florida for three days of discussions on how to execute his legislative agenda. 

    Vance addressed the gathering on Tuesday in a speech that acknowledged the differences of opinion across the Republican conference, while imploring them to find a way to overcome those divisions and “be good” to one another, two lawmakers in the room told Fox News Digital.

    Those fractures flared up a short while later, however, when two lawmakers stood up to criticize colleagues who were not attending the multi-day event during the question and answer portion of Vance’s appearance, two other sources said.

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    Vice President JD Vance addressed House Republicans in a closed-door speech on Tuesday at Trump Doral golf course and resort. (Getty Images)

    It comes after Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, posted on X that he was not attending the retreat, arguing the event was a waste of time.

    “It is being reported I am not at the so-called Republican retreat in Florida. I am not,” Roy wrote. “I am in Texas, with my family & meeting with constituents, rather than spending $2K to hear more excuses for increasing deficits & not being in DC to deliver Trump’s border security [funding] ASAP.”

    Roy told Fox News that he could not speak for fellow members of the ultra-conservative House Freedom Caucus who were missing from the retreat, adding, “we all have things that we’ve got to deal with.”

    “If you’re asking me to go spend money to go sit in a resort rather than doing our damn job…no, I’m not going to do that,” he said.

    Others argued that Roy and others’ absence was actively undermining attempts to unify behind a legislative roadmap.

    WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT DOGE AND ITS QUEST TO SLASH GOVERNMENT WASTE, SPENDING

    Chip Roy at Trump inauguration

    Rep. Chip Roy missed the GOP gathering in Florida. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    “Sadly enough, we have people sitting at home complaining about the meeting on Twitter, and they’re the ones who’d rather complain, attack, argue, than be part of the solution,” Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., told Fox News Digital. “We know who they are. We just have to deal with it.”

    With a razor-thin margin in the House, Republicans must vote in virtual lock-step to pass any legislation without Democratic support.

    One lawmaker said Vance embraced a “team message” during his speech and “recognizes there will be differences, but we must come together once debate is over.”

    Vance also told Republicans that Trump wants to raise the debt limit, something he will have to contend with this year, without support from or leverage by Democrats, Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., told reporters after the meeting. 

    Trump and the RNC announce a $76 million fundraising haul in April

    President Donald Trump addressed the retreat on Monday. (Donald Trump 2024 campaign)

    Other Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital while leaving the event also embraced the Ohio Republican’s message and him as a messenger.

    “He’s saying the things about fiscal sanity that we need to hear,” Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas, said.

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    “He’s smart as hell, he’s eloquent,” Murphy said. “Trump really nailed it on that one – he was a great pick.”

  • House Republicans fly down to Trump’s backyard for annual working retreat

    House Republicans fly down to Trump’s backyard for annual working retreat

    House Republicans are flying down to South Florida this week for their annual issues conference, where President Donald Trump is expected to speak with lawmakers hashing out the GOP agenda for the next two years.

    It’s another sign of the House GOP conference’s push for unity with Trump that the conference is being held at Trump National Doral, his golf course and resort near Miami.

    “He’s going to come and address the Republicans there, and we’re looking forward to that,” Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., confirmed to reporters last week.

    Trump has made no secret of his intent to keep a close eye on the Republican majorities in the House and Senate this year, particularly as they discuss how to use their numbers to pass a massive conservative policy overhaul via the budget reconciliation process.

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    Speaker Mike Johnson said he expects President Trump to address lawmakers at the Republican issues conference. (Getty Images)

    By reducing the threshold for Senate passage from 60 votes to a 51-seat simple majority, reconciliation allows a party in control of both congressional chambers to enact sweeping changes, provided they’re relevant to budgetary and fiscal policy.

    Meanwhile, lawmakers are also contending with the debt ceiling being reinstated this month after it was temporarily suspended in a bipartisan deal during the Trump administration.

    And coming on March 14 is the deadline to avert a partial government shutdown, which Congress has extended twice since the end of the previous fiscal year on Oct. 1.

    John Thune

    Johnson is working with Senate Majority Leader John Thune on reconciliation. (Getty Images)

    “I think obviously everyone is ready to get to work,” Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital. “With President Trump’s inauguration behind us, now we’re focused on the task at hand – everything from the border to the tax package, energy and defense and national security, and our debt. What we need to do over the next two years to really fulfill the agenda that we laid out for the American people.”

    Lawler said he anticipated reconciliation would be a key focus of Trump’s remarks.

    With razor-thin margins in the House and Senate, Republicans can afford few dissenters if they are going to get to the finish line. 

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    Lawler on Capitol Hill

    Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., was realistic about expectations for the Miami conference but was ultimately optimistic about finding a path forward. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    Lawler is one of several Republicans who have drawn red lines in the discussions, vowing not to vote for a reconciliation bill that does not lift state and local tax (SALT) deduction caps – limits that have put a strain on suburban districts outside major cities.

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    He was realistic about setting expectations for their short Florida trip but was optimistic Republicans would eventually come together.

    “I think we’re in the middle of the process and, you know, this is obviously not going to be resolved over these three days,” Lawler said. “But this is, I think, an important opportunity for everyone to really sit down and spend their time going through a lot of these issues.”