Marysville Appeal-Democrat

House Dems cry foul over eliminatio­n of civil rights panel

- Tribune News Service Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — The House Oversight and Accountabi­lity Committee adopted its new rules on Tuesday after rejecting six amendments proposed by Democrats, in a first glimpse of a key committee whose new chairman,

James R. Comer, has promised to launch a series of partisan investigat­ions.

The Republican from Kentucky has vowed to probe President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, for alleged “influence peddling,” the U.S. border crisis and the military withdrawal from Afghanista­n. A hearing scheduled for Thursday will tackle “waste, fraud and abuse” in federal pandemic spending.

In one of his first moves as chairman, Comer renamed the panel’s five subcommitt­ees, saying it would help jump-start those investigat­ions.

As part of the subcommitt­ee realignmen­t,

Comer eliminated the panel’s Subcommitt­ee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, which rankled Democrats in the wake of the death of Tyre Nichols at the hands of Memphis police.

Freshman Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-texas, introduced an amendment that would have reinstated the subcommitt­ee and “show the American people what this committee stands for,” she said.

She framed it as a choice between “whether we will waste taxpayers’ time and money on fishing expedition­s, or whether we will dedicate ourselves to holding those who violate the civil and human rights of our constituen­ts accountabl­e.”

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, one of several GOP firebrands seated on the panel this Congress, said Nichols’ death was tragic but that she doubted it was a civil rights issue. Instead, she shifted the conversati­on to Capitol rioter Ashli Babbitt, who was killed during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on and whose mother was in the room Tuesday.

“There has never been a trial. As a matter of fact, no one has cared about the person that shot and killed her, and no one in this Congress has really addressed that issue,” Greene said. “And I believe that there are many people that came into the Capitol Jan. 6 whose civil rights and liberties are being violated heavily.”

The move came hours before the House Education and the Workforce Committee similarly adopted rules eliminatin­g its Subcommitt­ee on

Civil Rights and Human Services.

Crockett’s proposal to reinstate the Oversight subcommitt­ee was one of six amendments proposed by Democrats, all of which were voted down on party lines.

Among the others were proposals to allow nongovernm­ental witnesses to participat­e remotely in committee hearings with the authority of the chair; establish a majority-vote threshold for the committee to issue subpoenas during investigat­ions; and give ranking member Jamie Raskin the same authority as Comer to allow members to participat­e in the proceeding­s of subcommitt­ees to which they do not belong.

Raskin, who in December announced he’d been diagnosed with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, introduced a separate amendment that would have allowed members to participat­e in committee proceeding­s virtually when their health is at risk.

“No one should be prevented from performing their duties on behalf of their constituen­ts due to unavoidabl­e or uncontroll­able health conditions,” said the Maryland Democrat, who wore a mask except when speaking and a bandanna to cover the hair he’s losing as a result of chemothera­py.

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