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Morning Brief: Contempt, Compromise & Redrawn Lines

From Capitol Hill’s escalating showdown with the Clintons, to a sudden thaw in transatlantic tensions over Greenland, to a high-stakes redistricting fight that could reshape control of Congress, yesterday’s stories highlight how power is being tested — and contested — at every level of government.

House Moves to Hold the Clintons in Contempt Over Epstein Probe

A simmering confrontation between Congress and the Clintons escalated Wednesday, as the House Oversight Committee voted to advance contempt of Congress resolutions against former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The panel voted 34–8 to advance the resolution against Bill Clinton and 28–15 against Hillary Clinton after both declined to appear for in-person depositions tied to the committee’s investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. Committee Chairman James Comer said the vote was about enforcing congressional authority, not politics.

“No witness — not a former president nor a private citizen — may willfully defy a duly-issued congressional subpoena without consequence,” Comer said, adding that he expects bipartisan support when the resolutions reach the House floor.

The committee rejected a last-minute proposal from the Clintons’ attorneys that would have allowed limited testimony without an official transcript. Comer said the offer appeared designed to avoid sworn, recorded testimony — a condition he argued is non-negotiable in an investigation of this magnitude.

The Clintons have submitted sworn written statements asserting they had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activity and arguing the subpoenas are legally invalid. Their lawyers maintain the requests lack a legitimate legislative purpose and infringe on separation-of-powers principles.

If approved by the full House, the contempt resolutions could be referred to the Department of Justice, marking a rare step against a former president and former secretary of state. The House could take up the matter as early as the first week of February.

Trump Pulls Back European Tariffs After Greenland Talks Show Progress

Across the Atlantic, President Donald Trump abruptly reversed course on threatened tariffs against European nations, citing progress toward a potential framework agreement over Greenland.

Trump had previously warned that imports from eight European countries would face tariffs starting at 10% on Feb. 1 — rising to 25% by June — unless Europe agreed to negotiations over American control or influence in Greenland. The threat rattled European capitals and stalled a major U.S.–EU trade deal that was nearing approval.

Administration officials now say talks at the World Economic Forum and with NATO partners produced a tentative, nonbinding framework focused on Arctic security, economic development, and future commercial cooperation involving Greenland. Trump said the tariffs would be shelved “now that a solution has been found,” provided negotiations continue in good faith.

While details remain scarce, European leaders described the development as a welcome de-escalation after weeks of mounting tension. EU officials had warned the tariffs could trigger a broader trade war and permanently damage transatlantic relations.

Negotiators are expected to reconvene in Brussels in the coming weeks, with both sides signaling cautious optimism — even as the larger question of Greenland’s future remains unresolved.

Maryland Democrats Move to Redraw the Map — and the Stakes Are National

Back at home, Maryland Democrats took a decisive step toward eliminating the state’s lone Republican House seat, setting off a high-stakes redistricting battle with national implications.

A redistricting commission appointed by Gov. Wes Moore voted Tuesday night to recommend new congressional lines that would likely dismantle Rep. Andy Harris’s Eastern Shore-based district, potentially sending an all-Democratic delegation to Washington.

Democrats currently hold seven of Maryland’s eight House seats. Under the proposed map, Harris’s district would be reshaped in a way that dramatically alters its partisan makeup.

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries praised the effort, framing it as retaliation for Republican-led redistricting efforts in states like Texas, Florida, and North Carolina. “Arrogant and corrupt Republicans started this battle,” Jeffries said. “Democrats will end it.”

But the strategy has exposed fractures within Maryland’s own Democratic ranks. Senate President Bill Ferguson has warned that mid-decade redistricting could be unconstitutional and invite lawsuits — noting that Maryland’s last attempt at aggressive map-drawing was struck down by state courts just two years ago.

Gov. Moore, widely viewed as a future national contender, has argued Democrats cannot afford unilateral disarmament with control of the House hanging by a thread. The fight now shifts to the General Assembly, where lawmakers must decide whether to press forward — and risk legal and political backlash — or pull back from a plan that could reshape the balance of power in Congress.

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Maryland Democrats just took a major step toward a full House delegation takeover. A redistricting commission appointed by Gov. Wes Moore voted late Tuesday to recommend a new congressional map that would eliminate the state’s lone Republican-held seat — likely sending eight Democrats to Congress.


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