Los Angeles Times

Feinstein won’t seek crucial role

Longtime California senator, 87, will give up leadership roles on committees after facing criticism.

- BY JENNIFER HABERKORN

Longtime California lawmaker says she will not pursue leadership of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

WASHINGTON — Sen. Dianne Feinstein said Monday she will not pursue leadership of the high- profile Senate Judiciary Committee or any other committee next year, taking a dramatic step back after pressure from progressiv­es who questioned her willingnes­s to use tough, partisan politics to confirm any Biden administra­tion Supreme Court picks and other judicial nomination­s.

“California is a huge state confrontin­g two existentia­l threats — wildfire and drought — that are only getting worse with climate change. In the next Congress, I plan to increase my attention on those two crucial issues,” Feinstein said in a statement. “I also believe that defeating COVID- 19, combating climate change and protecting access to healthcare are critical national priorities that require even more concentrat­ion.”

Feinstein, 87, is the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee and was in line to become its f irst female chairman if Democrats take control of the Senate.

But the majority won’t be decided until two Senate seats in Georgia go to a runoff in January. Democrats will need to win both of those races to gain control of the Senate and with it, the power to confirm Biden’s judicial appointmen­ts.

Feinstein’s decision to give up such a highly coveted post is likely to renew speculatio­n — which arose in 2018 when at age 85 she ran for a sixth term — that she will not serve the entirety of her Senate term.

Her decision not to pursue any full committee posts — including the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, where she also has the seniority to lead — comes as her tenure on the Judiciary Committee

has come under fire, particular­ly her handling as the ranking Democrat of the confirmati­on hearings of President Trump’s Supreme Court nominees Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett.

Some rank- and- f ile Democrats had quietly discussed with Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer ( D- N. Y.) whether seniority is still the best way for Democrats to determine chairmansh­ips and whether Feinstein was the right person to lead Democrats on the Judiciary Committee. Schumer met with Feinstein in late October for what he described as a “very serious” conversati­on.

Senior lawmakers rarely step down from powerful chairmansh­ip or ranking-member positions, making Feinstein’s decision unusual. Republican­s have term limits for committee chairmansh­ips, but Democrats do not.

Feinstein, once one of the Democratic Party’s most seasoned and effective legislator­s, wrote the nation’s

first federal assault weapons ban, which expired in 2004, and as head of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee in 2014, fought the Obama- era CIA and Republican­s to release unclassifi­ed portions of a massive investigat­ion into U. S. use of torture.

But at a time of evergrowin­g partisansh­ip in Washington, some fellow Democrats complained she was not tough enough on Republican­s during the Barrett hearing, after which Feinstein shared a hug with Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham ( R- S. C.).

“This has been one of the best set of hearings that I’ve participat­ed in,” Feinstein said to Graham. “It leaves one with a lot of hopes, a lot of questions and even some ideas perhaps of good bipartisan legislatio­n we can put together.”

Her comment not only undercut Democrats’ message that Barrett’s confirmati­on was illegitima­te because it came so close to the election, it also helped boost Graham, who was engaged

in what was thought to be a neck- and- neck battle for reelection with Democrat Jaime Harrison in South Carolina.

During the ugly fight over Kavanaugh, Feinstein was criticized for agreeing to Christine Blasey Ford’s request for anonymity after the Palo Alto professor privately alleged that Kavanaugh assaulted her when they were teenagers, a charge he denied. Ford eventually came forward to testify voluntaril­y.

Progressiv­e groups such as Demand Justice and NARAL Pro- Choice America openly called for Feinstein to step down from her leadership of Democrats on the Judiciary Committee after the Barrett hearing.

After the election, more than a dozen progressiv­e groups, including Demand Justice, Move On and the Sunrise Movement, privately pleaded with Schumer to step in and replace Feinstein.

“Our current national moment requires leaders who recognize the many

threats to our democracy and who act boldly and unapologet­ically to address those threats. Sen. Feinstein, unfortunat­ely, is not one of those leaders,” they wrote. “We therefore urge you to replace her in her leadership role on the Senate Judiciary Committee with a Democratic senator who will be.”

Demand Justice Executive Director Brian Fallon said Feinstein’s decision to step down was “necessary” if Democrats want to push back on Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s ( R- Ky.) conservati­ve imprint on the courts. The committee now “must be led by someone who will not wishfully cling to a bygone era of civility and decorum that Republican­s abandoned long ago,” and someone who is willing to fight “no matter what.”

It is unclear who will succeed Feinstein. Sen. Patrick J. Leahy ( D- Vt.) is next in line in seniority, but he is viewed as unlikely to give up his post on the Appropriat­ions Committee. Next up would be Sen. Richard J. Durbin ( D- Ill.), who said Monday he will pursue the job. There is some question as to whether Democrats would want him to hold the Judiciary slot along with his position as the Democratic whip, but there is precedent for the whip to hold two slots. Sen. Sheldon White house( D-R. I .) could throw his hat in the ring as well.

Since she was first elected to Congress in 1992, Feinstein’s politics have generally trended closer to the middle than those of younger leaders in her party. That chasm has grown more defined as the party has moved further left.

For instance, she has been a proponent of keeping the legislativ­e filibuster, which sets a de facto requiremen­t of 60 votes in the Senate to approve legislatio­n. Many other Democrats say it should be abandoned if they take control of the Senate in order to advance laws on climate change, voting rights and other measures expected to face solid GOP opposition. However, any discussion of eliminatin­g the filibuster next year is moot as Democrats may not even have control of the chamber.

In recent months, Feinstein’s staff has sometimes had to clarify statements the senator has made in interviews in the Capitol. For instance, she told a Los Angeles Times reporter in September that she was unfamiliar with GOP moves to confirm appellate judges who don’t have the approval of their home- state senators, even though she had previously objected to that practice concerning judges in California.

Feinstein said she will maintain her roles as a member of Judiciary, Intelligen­ce and other key committees. In a statement, Schumer praised her work and gave a nod to her future role.

“Sen. Feinstein’s experience, decades- long relationsh­ip with President- elect Biden, and leadership on so many issues will continue to be an asset for our caucus, California, and the country as we begin a new term with the new president,” he said.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Associated Press ?? CALIFORNIA Sen. Dianne Feinstein, once one of the Democratic Party’s most effective legislator­s, has been criticized recently by progressiv­e groups, who said she was not acting to address threats to U. S. democracy.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Associated Press CALIFORNIA Sen. Dianne Feinstein, once one of the Democratic Party’s most effective legislator­s, has been criticized recently by progressiv­e groups, who said she was not acting to address threats to U. S. democracy.

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