The news grabbing the headlines today is the congressional fight over the creation of a bipartisan independent commission to investigate the events surrounding the January 6 insurrection.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) made demands of the Democrats that he evidently expected Democrats to refuse, enabling him to object to the commission by claiming it was partisan. But the Democrats agreed to his conditions, forcing him to object in such a way that it was clear he is simply covering for the former president and, likely, for himself, because he does not want to have to testify to what he observed or participated in in the days around that event (including, for example, the hostile phone call with Trump when McCarthy was inside the besieged Capitol).
McCarthy and the Republican whip, Steven Scalise (R-LA), whose job is to get Republican members to vote along the lines leadership requires, set out to get Republican representatives to oppose the creation of the commission. But when the House voted on the bill this afternoon, 35 Republicans broke ranks to join the Democrats and vote to create the commission. The defections were a sign that McCarthy and the Trump caucus do not entirely own the House Republicans yet; 35 Republicans would like to know what the heck happened on January 6. One hundred and seventy-five Republicans want to sweep the whole event under the rug. The final vote on the bill to create the commission was 252-175.
Representative Tim Ryan (D-OH) spoke for those of us who are gobsmacked that anyone could say we do not need to investigate the most profound attack on our democracy in our history. He thanked the Republicans supporting the creation of the independent commission and then turned on the rest. “Benghazi. You guys chased the former secretary of state all over the country, spent millions of dollars. We have people scaling the Capitol, hitting the Capitol police with lead pipes across the head, and we can’t get bipartisanship. What else has to happen in this country? Cops: this is a slap in the face to every rank-and-file cop in the United States. If we’re going to take on China, if we’re going to rebuild the country, if we’re going to reverse climate change, we need two political parties in this country that are both living in reality—and you ain’t one of them.”
The bill now goes to the Senate, where Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has announced he will not support it. After Trump’s second impeachment trial, McConnell said that he hadn’t voted to convict Trump because the former president would face punishment later. Now he has attacked the bipartisan commission as partisan and said, "It's not at all clear what new facts or additional investigation yet another commission could actually lay on top of existing efforts by law enforcement and Congress,” implying that there has been an investigation already—there has not—and that the fact we don’t know what such a commission would uncover means we have no need to uncover it.
All of this matters because the January 6 insurrection was an attack on our democracy, and the Republican Party has concluded that they do not want us to know what happened. A number of Republicans have said they believe that “Antifa” was behind the riot; if they really thought that were the case, wouldn’t they want an investigation?
The only logical conclusion is that they are afraid of what an investigation will uncover. And, in fact, that’s precisely what Republican senators are saying: they do not want an investigation to color the 2020 election. Today Senate Republican whip John Thune (R-SD) said that the findings of any investigation “could be weaponized politically and drug into next year” (although the bipartisan agreement requires the investigation to be over by the end of 2021). After years of weaponizing investigations—Benghazi, Secretary of State Clinton’s emails, Hunter Biden—the Republicans are facing an investigation, based in reality, that likely will reflect badly on them. They want no part of it.
But it is going to be very difficult to stuff back into the bottle the genie of interest in what the heck went on during the Trump administration. Yesterday’s announcement by New York Attorney General Letitia James that her office’s investigation into the Trump Organization has become a criminal investigation sparked fireworks from the former president. Today he issued a long, rambling statement that rehashed all his complaints about, well, everything, but the centerpiece was James’s announcement. It was weird and unhinged, even for him, and suggested that he is very worried that there will be criminal charges forthcoming.
And today a filing from the Department of Justice showed that, under Biden, the department has found the parents of 54 more children, from whom they were separated at our southern border by the Trump administration in an attempt to stop refugees from entering the country. The previous administration separated at least 2800 children from their parents. Shortly after he took office, Biden created a task force in the Department of Homeland Security to reunite families. The parents of 391 migrant children have still not been found.
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Notes:
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/mcconnell-announces-opposition-bill-create-jan-commission/story
https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/19/politics/republican-reaction-january-6-probe/index.html
https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/19/politics/ms-l-children-reunited/index.html
This afternoon, I called the local offices of my representatives Senators Cornyn and Cruz to voice my support for a Congressional investigation of January 6. Surprisingly, I spoke with a person both times. Yes, I realize that neither will vote in favor.
The nation deserves a full investigation.
One would think this would have been a nonpartisan vote; but because it was partisan, I applaud these 35 House Republicans who broke with their party to vote in favor of the January 6th Commission:
* French Hill of Arkansas
* Steve Womack of Arkansas
* David Valadao of California
* Carlos Gimenez of Florida
* Maria Elvira Salazar of Florida
* Mike Simpson of Idaho
* Adam Kinzinger of Illinois
* Rodney Davis of Illinois
* Trey Hollingsworth of Indiana
* Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa
* Fred Upton of Michigan
* Peter Meijer of Michigan
* Michael Guest of Mississippi
* Don Bacon of Nebraska
* Jeff Fortenberry of Nebraska
* Chris Smith of New Jersey
* Andrew Garbarino of New York
* Chris Jacobs of New York
* John Katko of New York
* Tom Reed of New York
* Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio
* David Joyce of Ohio
* Stephanie Bice of Oklahoma
* Cliff Bentz of Oregon
* Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania
* Tom Rice of South Carolina
* Dusty Johnson of South Dakota
* Tony Gonzales of Texas
* Van Taylor of Texas
* Blake Moore of Utah
* John Curtis of Utah
* Dan Newhouse of Washington
* Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington
* David McKinley of West Virginia
* Liz Cheney of Wyoming