Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After Benghazi, Gowdy’s target Trump

GOP hails oversight panel choice; Democrat doubts he’ll see a ‘vigorous’ inquiry

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — Rep. Trey Gowdy is known as a dogged investigat­or of Hillary Clinton. Now Democrats wonder whether the South Carolina Republican will pursue President Donald Trump with the same vigor he used in going after the Democratic presidenti­al candidate.

Later this month, Gowdy, 52, is set to become chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, where he will lead official scrutiny of the Trump administra­tion, including a budding investigat­ion into possible ties between Russia and Trump’s campaign.

Gowdy led a two-year investigat­ion into the deadly 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, focusing heavily on Clinton’s role as secretary of state. It was the committee’s probe that revealed Clinton used a private email server for government work, prompting an FBI investigat­ion that proved to be an albatross in her campaign.

House Speaker Paul Ryan and other Republican­s say the four-term lawmaker and former federal prosecutor is the right man for the job.

Democrats are not convinced.

“When push gets to shove, I think Trey’s a reliable partisan and that’s why Ryan picked him,” said Rep. Gerald Connolly.

In 2014, House Speaker John Boehner selected Gowdy “as a very junior member to head up the Benghazi panel to go after Hillary Clinton. That was not an accident,” the Virginia Democrat said. “Having done his duty well, Paul Ryan has now tapped him to head Oversight, where your job obviously is to protect the man in the White House. So vigorous oversight is not on the agenda.”

The House Republican Steering Committee on Thursday recommende­d Gowdy for the chairmansh­ip, replacing Utah’s Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who is leaving Congress on June 30. Gowdy beat out Oklahoma’s Rep. Steve Russell. The full House Republican conference is expected to confirm the choice next week.

Rep. Mark Sanford, another South Carolina Republican who briefly considered running for the oversight post, said Gowdy has “a steady prosecutor­ial mind” and a keen understand­ing of issues facing the committee.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., a close friend and former colleague of Gowdy in the House, said “no one works harder and is more committed to the truth and the rule of law than Trey.”

Connolly, a member of the oversight panel, stressed that he likes Gowdy personally and praised his skills as a former prosecutor and lawmaker. But he said Gowdy knows his role in the GOP leadership.

“I don’t think Paul Ryan is worried about that streak of independen­ce showing itself anytime soon — and certainly not in the context of Donald Trump and the Russia thing,” he said.

Ryan, in a statement, said Gowdy “possesses the experience and deep commitment to transparen­cy and accountabi­lity” needed as oversight chairman. “He has proven that he will always look out for taxpayers and seek answers from the bureaucrac­y. Trey has my absolute confidence, and I know he will do an outstandin­g job,” Ryan said.

Gowdy led the Benghazi inquiry from May 2014 through last July. The committee’s 800-page report accused the Obama administra­tion of lethal mistakes, but it produced no evidence of wrongdoing by Clinton, even as Gowdy threatened to seek a federal investigat­ion into whether she lied to the committee under oath in 2015.

In the end, Gowdy did not sign a perjury complaint against Clinton filed by House Republican­s. The July 2016 complaint to the Justice Department was made by Chaffetz and House Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va.

Gowdy said in a statement Thursday that he was “grateful” for “this opportunit­y to serve.” The statement focused on the committee’s institutio­nal responsibi­lities and made no mention of specific lines of inquiry.

Sanford, a Trump critic, said some constituen­ts have expressed concerns about the partisan focus of the Benghazi investigat­ion.

“I try to convince them my experience with Trey has been most even-handed, and it’s my hope and expectatio­n that he has the same approach to the committee at large,” he said.

Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the senior Democrat on Oversight, served with Gowdy on the Benghazi panel, where Cummings also was the top Democrat. While the men initially pledged to work together, their relationsh­ip descended into partisan bickering by the time the investigat­ion ended last summer.

Still, Cummings congratula­ted Gowdy in a statement and promised to “support his efforts whenever we can.”

Gowdy takes over the oversight panel just as it is poised to investigat­e Trump’s firing of James Comey as FBI director amid the FBI’s probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election and possible connection­s between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Gowdy is already familiar with the questions over Trump’s Russia ties because of his seat on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, which has conducted a probe of its own since allegation­s of Russian efforts to influence the presidenti­al election surfaced late last year.

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