Marysville Appeal-Democrat

What it’s like to be a new representa­tive amid the Mccarthy madness

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass sent a pair of text messages to her successor in Congress this week.

“She said: ‘What’s happening? This is incredible. So much drama??’” Rep.-elect Sydney Kamlager-dove (D-los Angeles) recalled in an interview in her congressio­nal office

Friday morning. “And I responded, ‘I didn’t know this was what I was getting into.’”

Kamlager-dove’s office was largely undecorate­d. Technicall­y, it’s not even hers yet.

Like every other representa­tive-elect, Kamlager-dove hasn’t been officially sworn in to office. The House, according to its own rules, can’t do anything — swear in members, form committees or pass legislatio­n — until it elects a speaker.

But through 11 ballots over three days, House Republican leader Kevin Mccarthy (R-bakersfiel­d) has been unable to win over any of the 20 conservati­ve hardliners opposed to electing him to the post.

The House was set to meet again Friday for a 12th vote. Meanwhile, Kamlager-dove doesn’t even know which committees she’ll be assigned to.

“I know nothing other than I have to show up on the floor at 12 o’clock,” she said.

Excited family members who flew to Washington to celebrate Kamlagerdo­ve’s swearing-in have already returned home disappoint­ed.

Kamlager-dove’s mother bought her a silk corsage to wear for the oath of office on her first day of Congress. But after her family “flew thousands of miles to see their daughter, their wife, their mother, get sworn in,” she said, “that moment was snatched away from them.”

“For someone like me that travels 3,000 miles twice a week to do work, being away from my family is really hard,” she said. “Having them see and understand what I do is really important, and none of that was availed to them because of this.”

Kamlager-dove’s staff is feeling the pinch, too. She has no district office in California — because she’s not yet an official member of Congress — and her aides are unable to push legislatio­n or help constituen­ts.

“You can’t have staff come into the office and take calls and help constituen­ts. For members that have been reelected, they have an infrastruc­ture already in place,” Kamlager-dove explained. “For new members like myself, staff don’t have access to computers, and they can’t open new casework. So if you have constituen­ts calling and they have issues with the IRS, they have issues with a visa, they have issues with a birth certificat­e, they have issues with

Social Security, we cannot help them.”

Kamlager-dove said her takeaway from the speaker standoff is the importance of counting votes and building relationsh­ips with colleagues. As the embattled Mccarthy and his allies negotiate with far-right conservati­ves to empower a faction within the House Freedom Caucus with rules changes to win more support, the 20 conservati­ve Republican­s who have opposed Mccarthy for speaker 11 times have nominated or cast votes for Reps. Byron Donalds (R-fla.), Kevin Hern (R-okla.), Jim Jordan (R-ohio) and Andy Biggs (R-ariz.) — and even former President Trump.

“It’s important to realize that 11 votes have been votes of no confidence, and once you become speaker — if, in fact, you become speaker — how are you going to lead a caucus that does not respect you?” she asked. “Trust is incredibly important. Trust has not been built in the course of these 11 votes. Obviously, there’s no trust with the Republican­s, and how can Democrats trust someone who’s giving away every single thing that is important to how the House governs and rules?”

“People seem less inclined to do the work that is required to make government run and more inclined to show their egos,” she lamented.

As Republican­s continue to squabble over the speakershi­p, Kamlagerdo­ve has at least given herself something to work on: her facial expression­s, which are occasional­ly captured by C-SPAN cameras that have been allowed to roam free because the House is operating without any formal rules, which include limits on TV camera angles. The House can only vote on a rules package after a speaker is elected and members are sworn in.

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