Los Angeles Times

Democrats in House focus on investigat­ions

Lawmakers will hold hearings on Trump officials and programs, while working on gun and pay equality bills.

- By Jennifer Haberkorn and Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — A day after the State of the Union address, House Democrats responded Wednesday by launching a counterage­nda, including a series of investigat­ions into the Trump administra­tion and legislatio­n they hope will send a compelling message to voters ahead of the 2020 election.

Democrats this week will hold nearly half a dozen investigat­ive hearings into Trump administra­tion officials and programs, and convene even more panels to discuss policy issues such as climate change, universal background checks for gun purchases, and campaign finance reform — all partisan initiative­s.

The rollout of the House Democrats’ agenda was delayed by the 35-day partial government shutdown over President Trump’s demand for money to build a wall along the southern border. That threat hasn’t completely subsided. Lawmakers are trying to craft a deal to avert another shutdown by Feb. 15.

But newly empowered Democrats, particular­ly members of the energetic freshman class, are ready to get moving.

“He’s not ready for it at all,” fifth-term Rep. Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) said of Trump, who spent the first two years of his presidency dealing with a Congress controlled by Republican­s. “He calls it presidenti­al harassment. He doesn’t get the basic process [of congressio­nal oversight]. So that’s the part that’s scary.”

The Democratic agenda will include three House floor votes on major bills by the end of March, according to tentative plans shared by Democratic sources. The bills are HR 1, a plan to reform the campaign finance system and enact changes to the elections process; HR 7, a bill that would attempt to

ensure equal pay for men and women; and HR 8, a bill to require universal background checks before people can buy guns.

All three have been championed by Democrats, but stand little chance of getting support in the GOPcontrol­led Senate.

That may not matter to Democrats, who hope to use the legislatio­n to make a case to voters ahead of the 2020 election. The investigat­ions, they say, are part of their constituti­onally empowered oversight of the executive branch.

Two Democratic-led panels will investigat­e how the administra­tion has spent money — one will look into financial decisions made during the shutdown and another will review spending on the 2010 healthcare law known as Obamacare. Another panel will investigat­e the administra­tion’s family-separation policy at the border.

They’ll hold a hearing on presidenti­al tax returns, kicking off a lengthy process that some hope could lead to the release of Trump’s tax filings.

Acting Atty. Gen. Matt Whitaker is slated to testify Friday, making him the first major administra­tion official to come before the House since Democrats obtained the majority.

Trump on Tuesday evening cast aspersions on such efforts, deriding “ridiculous partisan investigat­ions” in his State of the Union speech and warning that legislatio­n is unlikely to be enacted while investigat­ions are underway.

“If there is going to be peace and legislatio­n, there cannot be war and investigat­ion,” he told lawmakers in his address.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and other top Democrats have dismissed the idea, arguing that they can do both, and the president should be able to as well.

“One of Congress’ main roles under Article 1 of the Constituti­on is checks and balances,” said Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), who is leading the investigat­ion into the administra­tion’s border policies as chairwoman of the Energy and Commerce investigat­ion subcommitt­ee. “We’re going to do them in a very responsibl­e and thorough way. I don’t think it should impact any bipartisan [legislatio­n].”

Still, Democrats, particular­ly veteran lawmakers who have been in the minority and without subpoena power for eight years, are eager to hold the administra­tion accountabl­e.

“I’m going to pursue this investigat­ion until I get answers,” DeGette said. “If they come in and can answer our questions [at our first hearing], that’s great. Otherwise we will continue.”

And they say the White House shouldn’t be surprised by the wave of Democrats demanding informatio­n through letters and, potentiall­y, subpoenas.

“All of this is public,” said Rep. Anna G. Eshoo (DMenlo Park), who wants to see the president’s tax returns. “There’s a road map for the administra­tion [in our campaign pledges]. There are no secrets about what our agenda is.”

Democrats began to make their case Wednesday. Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), the new chairman of the powerful House Oversight Committee, recounted in a hearing on HR 1 the deathbed promise he made to his mother to protect voting rights.

“This is not Russia. This is the United States of America,” he said. “I will fight until the death to make sure every citizen, whether they’re the Green Party, the freedom party, whether they’re Democrat, whether they’re Republican, whatever, has that right to vote.”

The House is also starting work on two of the potentiall­y bipartisan pieces of legislatio­n this Congress could produce. A committee will hear testimony this week about an infrastruc­ture bill. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and other public officials are slated to testify. And several panels are planning or have already started hearings on legislatio­n to reduce prescripti­on drug prices. Those efforts are in relatively preliminar­y stages.

The legislator­s also floated the idea of voting on a proposal for the House to enter a lawsuit filed by Republican attorneys general against Obamacare. But it’s unclear whether the House wants to deal with the legal repercussi­ons of getting involved in a lawsuit already being defended by states such as California.

Such a vote could embarrass Republican­s, who would be torn between voting against Obamacare and voting against the law’s popular protection­s for people with preexistin­g conditions.

Democrats still need to sort out whether they will force members to vote on issues that divide the party internally, such as Medicare for all, an initiative that is popular with liberal Democrats but less so with more moderate voters. Floor votes on such proposals could oblige members to take a position and cause rifts within the party. And even if such legislatio­n were to pass the House, it would die in the Senate.

To illustrate the risk, some Democrats say that a 2009 vote on cap-and-trade legislatio­n, though it never became law, nonetheles­s played a role in major losses for the party in the following year’s election. But other Democrats argue that bold ideas are what won the majority in 2018 and deserve to get the recognitio­n of a floor vote.

“We as a Democratic caucus need to understand there is political diversity,” Bass said, adding that Democrats in Los Angeles and California don’t always recognize that other parts of the country aren’t as progressiv­e.

“I’m concerned that in some of the seats that we won, that some of the activists might not be entirely realistic about where the members have to be,” she added.

Democratic leaders are starting the year with initiative­s that are widely supported within the party. One of their bills would require anyone seeking to buy a firearm to undergo a background check. Many Democrats made the requiremen­t central to their campaigns.

“Democrats understand how important this is to the American people. We’ve heard from the people, the people want this addressed and we are doing just that,” said Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena), a sponsor of the bill.

Thompson was inspired to work on the issue by the Sandy Hook shooting and has been trying to persuade his Republican colleagues to hold hearings in the six years since. “They refused to do it, so finally we are going to get our hearing,” he said.

Rep. John Sarbanes (DMd.) hopes his campaign reform bill, which would tighten finance and ethics rules as well as expand voting rights, becomes “the new brand of the Democratic Party.”

As with Thompson’s bill, Republican­s in the Senate are expected to block Sarbanes’ legislatio­n from becoming law. But that doesn’t faze him.

“If we can get that passed in the House, then we can spend the next two years using that as a rallying cry,” Sarbanes said.

 ?? Doug Mills Pool Photo ?? PRESIDENT Trump derided “ridiculous partisan investigat­ions” in his State of the Union speech. Democrats say it is their role to provide checks and balances.
Doug Mills Pool Photo PRESIDENT Trump derided “ridiculous partisan investigat­ions” in his State of the Union speech. Democrats say it is their role to provide checks and balances.

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