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In a Trump-dominated Washington, new arrivals in the House try to emerge

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In a Trump-dominated Washington, new arrivals in the House try to emerge


Lateefah Simon is a widowed mom who is taking a new job, moving her 13-year-old to a new school.  She is legally blind and her life is about to go through some further upheaval.

When asked what worries her most, Simon paused for a moment, then took a deep breath.   Simon answered, “I will do whatever I can so that my eighth grader finishes her science homework. And, God bless, try to help her pass that French class too.”

Simon, 48, arrives in Washington Monday for orientation sessions near Capitol Hill having  been elected as the new U.S. Congresswoman representing California’s 12th District, which includes Oakland and Berkley.

Simon, who counts Vice President Kamala Harris as a close mentor, served as a civil rights attorney and helped the victims of sex trafficking, will be sworn into office with the 119th Congress on Jan. 3, 2025. 

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Lateefah Simon

CBS news


Simon is arriving in a Washington that is transfixed by the return of President-elect Donald Trump, his outsized personality and his pledges to overhaul the government and secure retribution against political enemies. 

But Simon and some of her new colleagues do not intend to go unnoticed — no matter which party controls the Congress or the White House.

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With her vision impaired, Simon has relied on public transportation and has a history of advocating to make mass transit more accessible to low-income people. She is embracing the opportunity to succeed Rep. Barbara Lee, a longtime progressive fixture in Washington who left office to pursue an unsuccessful campaign for the Democratic party’s nomination for U.S. Senate in California in 2024.  

Speaking to CBS News by phone while preparing for her first trip to Washington as an elected Congresswoman, Simon said she first must rebound from Harris’s defeat in the Presidential race.  “I’m devastated. My mentor was the President we deserved. But Kamala would always say: ‘Head up, roll up your sleeves, get to work.’ So that’s what I intend to do.”

Simon said she’ll pursue roles with the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, considering her background championing issues of mass transportation, and will seek out early leadership roles.

Simon told CBS News it is important that there is diversity among the members of key panels.   “We must defend the values of not just our party, but the people of the United States, particularly me, as disabled people,” she said. “Also the elders, the folks who are seeking health care, queer kids. I have work to do.”

Simon and the dozens of others elected who were newly-elected to Congress on Tuesday face a more immediate hurdle:  A tidal wave of life changes.

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For Simon, that includes moving her daughter to a new community midyear.

“As long as my seat is on the floor.. I won’t complain”

For Tom Barrett, a military veteran who won a competitive race for a vacated seat in the Michigan 7th Congressional District, it has been impossible to simply open all of the text messages. 

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Tom Barrett

CBS News


Barrett told CBS News, “I can’t even tell you how many phone calls I’ve received in the last couple of days.  I probably received 1,000 text messages just on election night. I haven’t read them all.”

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Barrett, a Michigan state senator from the Lansing area, bested a Democratic challenger in one of the most heated and expensive House races in the Midwest.  Barrett said he is hesitant to make any demands of his new colleagues.

“I joked to House Speaker Mike Johnson that as long as my seat is on the floor — and not in the upper Gallery — I won’t complain,” Barrett said.    

“I recognize that it is a significant job that has a lot of responsibility,” Barrett said.

But he appears poised to work comfortably in a Trump-dominated Washington.  When asked for his top legislative and leadership priorities, Barrett uncorked a response that name-checked Trump six times.  

Barrett spoke of “extending a lot of the provisions of the Trump tax cuts”, “Helping the Trump Administration stem the flow of people over the border” and restoring prior “Trump policies.”

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Barrett served as a helicopter pilot in the U.S. Army in the Iraq War and said he’d be interested in a seat on the  House Committee on Armed Services. But in the meantime, the Eaton County, Michigan, resident must find a different flight plan. He is spending time seeking the best weekly plan to trek by air to Washington, D.C. from either Lansing, Grand Rapids or Detroit.

“He’s getting an apple juice; I’m getting a beer”

After an exhausting campaign in which he and his campaign volunteers touted that they knocked on 200,000 doors, Democrat Josh Riley said he was looking forward to one quiet, post-election night with his 4-year-old son.  

“He’s getting an apple juice, I’m getting a beer and we’re going to watch a Cornell hockey game,” Riley said. 

Riley won one of the most expensive House races in the nation, defeating first-term Republican Marc Molinaro in an 11-county swath of upstate New York, spanning from Cooperstown to Binghamton and the distant New York City exurbs.

Arriving at a tumultuous moment in Washington, Riley said he will not try to compete with Trump or his powerful colleagues for a spotlight.  Riley told CBS News, “I’m not searching for a way to stand out.  If I do this job successfully, people in upstate New York will have more job opportunities and good wages.”

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Riley said he will take office with a high priority issue:  Housing prices.  “One of the things I’d like to do,” Riley said, “Is stop the predatory practice of Wall Street entities running around upstate New York, gobbling up our single family homes and using them to extract profits. Housing should be looked at as a civil right, not as a driver of profits.” 

Riley, an attorney and former Congressional aide, acknowledged his two-year term is expected to be spent in the minority party in the House.  But with narrow margins, Riley talked of exploring joining a New York Republican’s proposal for housing affordability.

“Eight firehoses”

Rob Bresnahan laughed a bit when he said, “I’m drinking out of nothing less than eight firehoses right now.” 

Bresnahan is getting his first taste of elected office, but beginning in the big leagues.   

“It’s starting to feel slightly more real,” Bresnahan told CBS News, “I never thought a kid from Butler Street in Wyoming, Pennsylvania would now be a member of Congress. I mean, it’s, it’s incredible.”

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Rob Bresnahan

CBS News


Bresnahan edged a veteran House Democrat to secure the seat representing the Scranton-area of Pennsylvania.  He leads an electrical and construction business, while also working in real estate development.  His introduction to politics included an unexpected stress:  Bresnahan said his fiancée, a local television news anchor, worked as the same broadcast outlet on which his opponent aired attack ads against him. 

“I give her so much credit for being able to, you know, watch the horrible things that were being said about me,” Breshnahan said. 

Bresnahan was one of two Republicans to oust Democratic House incumbents in the battleground state of Pennsylvania. Those victories gave Republicans an edge in securing a majority control of the House, which could turbocharge Trump’s legislative agenda in 2025.

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Bresnahan told CBS News he’d seek a seat on the House’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.   

“I understand the significance of infrastructure and transportation, outside of traditional roads and bridges,” he said. “Airports, levies, ports, freight rail and power distribution systems and sewer systems, that is the foundation and the hierarchy of needs of a society. I really think I can make a tangible difference with just my history of what I’ve done.”

“If you change something and it’s unpalatable to the other side, they’re just going to come and kick it out next time”

Rob Mackenzie will arrive in Washington with a 7-month-old son, who was born just days before Mackenzie won the primary to secure the Republican nomination in Pennsylvania’s 7th Congressional District, in the Allentown-area.   

And Mackenzie will  be bringing a rescue dog too.   

Mackenzie told CBS News that he and his wife “are going to be loading up the SUV and going down and trying to find an apartment.”

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But the new work begins quickly. 

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Rob Mackenzie

CBS News


Mackenzie said it is vital for Congress to move swiftly on the issues of inflation and border security championed by candidates, including Trump.

After toppling incumbent Democrat Susan Wild in a heated battleground race that captured the attention of both parties, Mackenzie argued that  bipartisan efforts hold the most promise of big change.   

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“If you want lasting change, you have to do it in a bipartisan fashion,” he said. “If you change something and it’s unpalatable to the other side, they’re just going to come and kick it out next time. And then the pendulum swings back and forth.” 

Mackenzie, 42, is one of dozens of Members of Congress-elect who will represent politically-purple Congressional districts, in which the opposing party is likely to muster a well-funded challenger in 2026.

He will begin his new job, with an immediate potential political target on his back. Mackenzie said his successful challenge to Wild was an expensive and grueling battle.  

“In a close and competitive district, it was never going to be a blowout,” he said. “That’s not the reality of this district. So we always knew it was going to be close, always competitive.”   

Mackenzie has served in the Pennsylvania state legislature, focusing on financial services and banking issues, and would seek similar committee work next year in the House. The House Ways and Means Committee and Financial Services Committee are expected to play outsized roles, as Trump pursues new tax cuts, tariffs and campaign pledges to tackle inflation.

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“National conversation about Trump-this and Trump-that”

Kristen McDonald Rivet capped her victorious election week with a Friday trek to a cellphone store. Her 15-year-old son needed a cellphone repair, which was joking referred to as a “national emergency.”   

The mother of six already repaired some of the damage her party suffered Tuesday. McDonald Rivet, a state legislator in Michigan, won a competitive race for Michigan’s 8th Congressional District in the Flint-area.  Trump prevailed in the 8th Congressional District and Democrats worried about their prospects there, because of the retirement of longtime Democratic Representative Dan Kildee, the latest in a family dynasty that’s held the seat for decades.

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Kristen McDonald Rivet

CBS News


“Here’s the thing:  My district voted for Donald Trump,” McDonald Pivet told CBS News by phone, after returning from the cellphone store repair mission. “There is a lot of national conversation about Trump-this and Trump-that.  When we’re working on things like prescription drugs, the cost of housing and lowering the cost of groceries, then I’m on board.I’m not going to get involved in the yelling and screaming and the stuff that makes politics awful.”

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She paused a moment, relating to CBS News that it really is striking just how many groceries a 15-year-old son can consume.  (She correctly fact-checked that the CBS News reporter’s 14-year-old son was also prodigious at eating high volumes of food)

McDonald Pivet arrives in Washington with years of experience in Michigan’s state legislature in Lansing.   “I’ve spent my life working on issues, like creating economic security for families, particularly for kids.   I started my career in Head Start.  These issues are top of mind, including expansion of the child tax credit.”

119th Congress

The group of newly-elected US House members arrives at a generally unstable moment in Washington, but amid a rare spec of stability in the lower chamber.    Leadership of House Republicans and House Democrats is expected to remain unscathed, after an expensive and heated election in which the margins in the House could emerge unchanged.

Orientation sessions for new members of the House begin this week near Capitol Hill, with some of the newly-elected seeking living quarters and training sessions for their unique new jobs.

Several of those who spoke with CBS News said they have spent their first days as an elected federal official working to find staff and constituent service experts.

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Bresnahan, the incoming freshman Representative from northeast Pennsylvania, is among those who must wind down — or find contingency plans – for private businesses back home. “I’m also a real estate developer and am trying to figure out, y’know, who is going to assume my role here,” he said.   

Bresnahan also has a post on the local SPCA board in Pennsylvania to navigate, as he simultaneously tries to learn to navigate the winding hallways and tunnels of Capitol Hill.

As for Simon, who says she is shifting her daughter to a new school in advance of beginning a term in Congress, the juggling of her new career is already well underway. As a single mom, she’s bearing an additional burden.

Simon paused a few moments in silence, then told CBS News, “Here’s the deal:  It’s going to be a tough job. But there are single mothers who are barely making minimum wage. And they are making ends meet barely. I will figure it out.”

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Suspect arrested in fatal stabbing of University of Washington student

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Suspect arrested in fatal stabbing of University of Washington student


A man wanted in connection with the fatal stabbing of a University of Washington student was arrested after photos of him were released to the public, authorities said on Thursday, May 14.

The Seattle Police Department did not name the suspect, but said in a statement that a 31-year-old man had turned himself in to the Bellevue Police Department. In a separate statement, the Bellevue Police Department said the suspect was arrested at about 10:42 p.m. local time on May 13.

The suspect was then transferred to the custody of Seattle Police Department homicide detectives and was booked into the “King County Jail for investigation of Murder,” according to police.

The arrest comes after police released photos taken from security camera footage of the suspect on May 13 and asked for the public’s assistance in the investigation. The photos appeared to show the man inside a laundry room.

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On May 10, University of Washington police officers responded to the Nordheim Court apartments, an off-campus housing complex for undergraduate students, and found a woman stabbed to death in the laundry room. The victim, who a local official previously said was a 19-year-old transgender student, was identified by the King County Medical Examiner’s Office as Juniper C. Blessing on May 14.

The incident sparked a law enforcement investigation and prompted authorities to advise Nordheim Court residents to stay in their homes and lock their doors and windows for several hours.

In a statement on May 14, University of Washington President Robert Jones announced an arrest had been made “in connection with the horrific act that took the life of one of our students on Sunday night.”

“I hope the arrest brings some sense of relief to our community,” Jones said. “But this arrest does not lessen the profound shock and grief that the victim’s loved ones and our campus are still experiencing or bring back a beloved, promising and talented member of our university.”

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“Much is still unknown about what caused this tragedy, and while this development is important, we will be looking closely at the circumstances in which this event occurred as part of our continued efforts to keep our campus community safe,” he added, noting that the university “remains committed to offering resources for those who need support, including our LGBTQIA+ community, during this difficult time.”

University of Washington student was found dead in laundry room

The University of Washington also confirmed on May 14 that the suspect arrested in connection with the fatal stabbing was the man in the photos shared by police. The Seattle Police Department had described the suspect as a Black man, about 5 feet, 7 inches tall, with short black hair and a “goatee with ingrown scruff around the jaw.”

Police added that the suspect was wearing rimmed eyeglasses; a long-sleeve, dark blue full zip shirt with a white collared shirt underneath; dirty blue jeans; and “dirty dark, possibly gray shoes with a light sole.”

University of Washington police officers responded to a report of a stabbing at about 10:10 p.m. local time on May 10 at Nordheim Court, according to the Seattle Police Department. Responding officers discovered a victim in a laundry room, the Seattle Police Department said in a statement on May 11.

Responding officers and the Seattle Fire Department “attempted lifesaving treatment,” but the Seattle Police Department said the victim was pronounced dead at the scene. After campus police cordoned off the area, the Seattle Police Department took over the investigation, and detectives arrived to process the scene. 

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In an emergency campus alert sent at about 10:40 p.m. local time on May 10, the University of Washington said campus police were investigating a death that occurred at the Nordheim Court apartments building. The alert advised residents of Nordheim Court to “stay indoors and lock doors and windows.”

By around 11:05 p.m., the university said the area had been secured but urged residents to remain indoors. Shortly before 1 a.m. on May 11, the university told residents that they no longer needed to remain indoors but noted that the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

Both police and the university later confirmed on May 11 that a student had been killed in the laundry room at Nordheim Court. The housing complex is privately managed and operated by Greystar, according to the university’s website and Balta.

Nordheim Court offers 454 units ranging in size from studios to four bedrooms, the university’s website states. The housing complex consists of eight buildings, and laundry facilities are located in Building 1 and Building 7.

The university said the student was found dead in Building 7.

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‘Juniper was simply the most amazing human being we have ever known’

In a statement shared by the Human Rights Alliance of Santa Fe on behalf of Blessing’s family, the LGBTQ+ advocacy group said the family was “currently in a state of profound shock and heartbreak, processing an unimaginable loss.”

“This loss has devastated not only those closest to their child but also many others throughout the Seattle, Santa Fe, and LGBTQIA2S communities who are mourning as well,” the organization said, adding that Blessing’s family has asked for privacy.

In the statement, the family said Blessing was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and attended Littlebrook School and Princeton Middle School until they moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 2018. Blessing’s family described them as a “gifted singer with a transcendent voice,” who studied at the New Mexico School for the Arts from 2020 to 2024.

The family noted that Blessing loved weather since early childhood and intended to study atmospheric science at the University of Washington while also pursuing minors in music and philosophy. They added that Blessing was “courageously living their life as who they were until it was cut tragically short.”

“Our family has been shattered by the loss of our child, Juniper Blessing, to an act of unspeakable violence near the University of Washington campus in Seattle,” according to the statement. “Juniper was simply the most amazing human being we have ever known – highly intelligent, extremely talented, and deeply sensitive to the needs of others. Juniper’s loss not only devastates us but diminishes the world.”

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Federal ‘summer surge’ to target youth crime in DC

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Federal ‘summer surge’ to target youth crime in DC


Federal authorities are planning a “summer surge” aimed at reducing crimes committed by young people in D.C. sources tell News4.

U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro is expected to announce Friday that the D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force will do additional enforcement and get more resources, law enforcement sources said.

The move comes about two weeks after the D.C. Council chose not to vote on extending Mayor Muriel Bowser’s emergency youth curfew zones over the summer.

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President Donald Trump issued an executive order in March 2025 that established the task force. He declared a crime emergency and temporarily federalized the locally run Metropolitan Police Department in August 2025.

Trump threatened to seize control of MPD after teens attacked then-Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) employee Edward Coristine, who was known by the nickname Big Balls.

Pirro has repeatedly railed against youth who commit crimes and told News4 she would like to see children as young as 12 prosecuted as adults.

“The time for coddling young people – 14, 15, 16, 17 – is over. And it’s time that we lowered the age of criminal responsibility,” she said in August.

Stay with NBC Washington for more details on this developing story.

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Houston pizza bar owner says he was arrested after dispute over health permit

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Houston pizza bar owner says he was arrested after dispute over health permit


HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — The owner of a popular Washington Avenue restaurant says he was arrested after a dispute with city health inspectors over whether his business had a valid permit to operate.

Surveillance video recorded May 6 inside Betelgeuse Betelgeuse shows owner Chris Cusack speaking with Houston Health Department officials before he was taken into custody.

“I was pretty dazed, and all I could do is comply until it all got figured out,” Cusack said.

Cusack was charged with failure to comply with local health and sanitary laws after authorities accused the restaurant of operating without a food dealer’s permit.

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The Houston Health Department says food dealer permits are valid for one year and must be renewed annually.

Cusack disputes the allegation, saying he has paperwork he believes proves the business had renewed its permit in March.

“I pulled it off the wall and showed it to him,” Cusack said. “He said it wasn’t the right business. I said it has my business’ name and address on it.”

Cusack said inspectors questioned whether the permit was tied to the correct business identification number.

“(The inspector) saw the first ID and said, ‘Ah ha, that’s the one you’re working under, so therefore this isn’t valid,’” Cusack said.

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ABC13 reached out to the Houston Health Department with questions about the arrest. The department referred questions to the Houston Police Department.

According to HPD, the health department ordered the business closed in October 2025 for operating without a permit, though officials did not specify which type of permit was involved.

Police said the business was instructed to remain closed until it complied with health regulations. On May 4, inspectors learned the restaurant was open, according to HPD. Inspectors returned two days later, when Cusack was arrested.

Cusack said he was never told to shut down the business and questioned why inspectors waited months before returning.

The restaurant, known for pizza and drinks, reopened following the arrest and was serving customers again on Wednesday.

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Cusack also expressed concern about what he described as aggressive enforcement targeting Washington Avenue businesses.

The entertainment district has faced increased law enforcement scrutiny in recent years as city leaders attempted to curb reckless behavior and nightlife-related crime.

“Washington Avenue business owners are just being confused by these intense raids on businesses for what are typically really basic scenarios,” Cusack said.

Court records show Cusack is scheduled to appear in court on Thursday on the charge.

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