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1 big thing: 🤷🏼‍♂️ Skipping Mike Johnson


 
Axios 
 
 
Axios Hill Leaders
By Hans Nichols · Aug 14, 2025

Happy Thursday! Today's edition is a newsy 808 words, 3 minutes.

  • 🤷🏼‍♂️ Skipping Mike Johnson
  • 🤑 Scoop: ActBlue's new rules

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1 big thing: 🤷🏼‍♂️ Skipping Mike Johnson
 
Man in a blue checkered suit and red tie speaking while walking, surrounded by people holding phones and recording him in a grand, well-lit hallway.

House Speaker Mike Johnson at the Capitol in July. Photo: Andrew Harnik via Getty Images

 

House Speaker Mike Johnson's right flank is trying to bypass him repeatedly next month by forcing votes on releasing the Epstein files and banning congressional stock trading.

Why it matters: The tool these members plan to use — the discharge petition — has been the source of growing controversy in the House.

  • A discharge petition allows the House rank-and-file to force a vote on any piece of legislation if at least 218 members sign on.
  • Top Republicans have discouraged the use of the maneuver, arguing it would effectively turn over control of the House floor to Democrats, but GOP populists have increasingly ignored that guidance.

State of play: Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) wants to force a vote on Rep. Tim Burchett's (R-Tenn.) bill to ban members of Congress, their spouses and dependent children from trading or owning stocks.

  • Tamping down congressional stock trading has been a cause célèbre for lawmakers in both parties for years, but congressional leaders have largely stonewalled their efforts to secure a vote.
  • Another discharge petition from Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) on forcing the release of the Justice Department's documents on Jeffrey Epstein is set to trigger a vote within days of the House's return in September.

Between the lines: The Epstein petition is widely expected to obtain 218 signatures, with most Democrats and several right-wing Republicans likely to sign on.

  • Luna's petition may be more contentious, sources said, as there have already been months of bipartisan negotiations around carefully crafting a stock trading bill that can pass with support from leadership.
  • Several Democrats told us Luna may not get the support she needs to pass her bill unless she coordinates with that bipartisan group.

Luna previously secured 218 signatures this spring for a vote on allowing House members who are new parents to vote by proxy for up to three months, but the vote never came to pass.

  • Johnson failed to procedurally kill the petition, then scrapped House votes until Luna agreed to a compromise.
  • One House Republican involved in that saga, speaking on the condition of anonymity, predicted Johnson would have a tougher time trying to spike the Epstein and stock trading discharge petitions due to broad public interest.

Zoom out: The Epstein push is a clear revolt against both President Trump, who has dismissed the matter, and Johnson, who has called for transparency but quashed several rogue efforts to release the files.

  • Johnson has indicated his support for a stock trading ban, but it's unclear if he would support doing so through a discharge petition that could undermine his authority.
  • Trump has indicated support for a stock trading ban in theory, but opposed a bipartisan Senate bill that would have extended the ban to future presidents and vice presidents.
  • A spokesperson for Johnson did not respond to a request for comment.

The bottom line: Both measures could also run aground in the Senate, which is less given to populist passions than the House and has a 60-vote threshold that makes it harder to pass legislation.

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— Andrew Solender

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2. 🤑 Scoop: ActBlue's new rules
 
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Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

 

ActBlue, the online donation platform that makes it easy for Democratic candidates to hoover up small-dollar donations, is making it easier for independents to do the same.

  • Republicans both fear and admire ActBlue for the ease with which it allows candidates to translate online enthusiasm into real-world dollars. President Trump also wants to investigate it for "illegal 'straw donor' and foreign contributions in American elections."

Why it matters: In the 2026 cycle, three independent candidates are seeking to challenge GOP senators in deep red states, but without a "D" next to their name.

  1. Dan Osborn, who has always been registered "unaffiliated," gave Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) a scare in 2024 by running as an independent. He's plotting a second run, this time against Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.).
  2. Todd Achilles, a former Democratic Idaho state representative, declared himself an unaffiliated voter earlier this summer and announced a challenge to Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho).
  3. Brian Bengs, who ran for the Senate as a Democrat in 2022, is challenging Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), as an independent.

Zoom in: The new rules allow ActBlue to include independent candidates on a "case-by-case" basis.

  • That change can give independents access to ActBlue earlier in the campaign cycle — and even if a declared Democrat is in the race.
  • A spokesperson for ActBlue confirmed the changes, which were made earlier this month.

Share this scoop.

— Hans Nichols

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1 big thing: 🤷🏼‍♂️ Skipping Mike Johnson 1 big thing: 🤷🏼‍♂️ Skipping Mike Johnson Reviewed by Diogenes on August 14, 2025 Rating: 5

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