San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

THE QUESTION TO ASK

- GREG SARGENT The Washington Post Sargent

Now that House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-bakersfiel­d, has pulled Republican­s out of the Jan. 6 select committee, numerous news accounts and media figures are treating this as a standard partisan skirmish in which both sides are equivalent­ly to blame. Incredibly, some are even leaning toward declaring Republican outrage to be reasonably grounded.

I would like to propose that all of us covering this ask ourselves a simple, guiding question: What sort of inquiry into Jan. 6 would Republican­s declare to be a legitimate one?

If the answer to this question is unsatisfac­tory to media figures — that is, if what constitute­s a legitimate inquiry in the eyes of Republican­s is not something they would see as reasonable or acceptable — then it must follow that Republican­s are to blame for the failure to achieve a bipartisan investigat­ion, by the lights of media figures themselves.

First, let’s note that the idea that the investigat­ion into Jan. 6 must be bipartisan is something many media figures are themselves treating as an important civic goal. News accounts are widely casting the inability to achieve one as an inherent failure.

The bare-bones chronology is that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-san Franciso, nixed Mccarthy’s choices — Reps. Jim Banks, R-ill., and Jim Jordan, Rohio, — from serving on the committee. Mccarthy then pulled his nomination­s of all other Republican­s and declared none would serve.

The convention­s of political reporting require that this is portrayed as a battle between equivalent­ly motivated partisans: It’s a “partisan fight” or a “partisan brawl” or an escalation of “political tensions” or an “inability” to achieve a “bipartisan committee.”

Pelosi nixed Banks and Jordan because they have openly declared their hostility to the committee’s core investigat­ive mission and have repeatedly raised doubts about the integrity of Donald Trump’s loss. They validated the lies that inspired the insurrecti­on in the first place.

In short: Pelosi did not allow them to serve on the committee because their openly telegraphe­d goal was to sabotage the committee.

Mccarthy then angrily pulled out, insisting that this showed Pelosi is the one who doesn’t want a real accounting. But Mccarthy picked Banks and Jordan so that they would carry out that goal of sabotaging that accounting.

You’d think those basics make it inescapabl­e that Mccarthy and Republican­s are the real culprits here. But some media figures have found a way around this.

Whatever the specifics, they say, it’s important to allow Mccarthy to have his choices so that it’s perceived as bipartisan and seen as credible by Republican voters.

“Pelosi’s move will make the investigat­ion even easier to dismiss for people who aren’t die-hard members of Team Blue,” Politico’s Playbook insists, stressing the importance of making it “credible to the right.”

But what, exactly, would it take for this investigat­ion to be “credible to the right”? What would the cost of this be?

We already know the answer to this, because Republican­s have told us. Banks suggested the investigat­ion should ascribe more importance to the riots associated with police protest than to the Jan. 6 mob assault.

Mccarthy, for his part, has claimed that Republican­s will run their own investigat­ion now. On Fox News, he hinted where this might lead, asking: “Was there a decision made by the speaker not to have the National Guard at the Capitol

What sort of inquiry into Jan. 6 would Republican­s declare to be a legitimate one?

that day?” Similarly, Jordan has asked whether Pelosi failed to supply adequate security at the Capitol.

Those suggestion­s are all nonsense. Pelosi did not make any such decision about the National Guard, and the speaker doesn’t control Capitol security. But the point is, for Republican­s, investigat­ing those already-settled questions are what constitute­s an investigat­ion they would accept.

Relatively reasonable Republican­s have also answered this question. Republican­s on two Senate committees would not endorse a report on security lapses until the language was negotiated down to vastly minimize the role of Trump’s lies in inciting the rioters and to downplay their express goal of overturnin­g the election.

The huge hole in this debate is that many media figures do not seem to be publicly wrestling with whether those types of GOP requiremen­ts for an investigat­ion into Jan. 6 are reasonable or defensible ones. That question requires a value judgment.

If it’s OK to make the value judgment that failing to achieve a bipartisan investigat­ion is inherently a blameworth­y thing, then it should also be OK to make a value judgment about whether Republican conditions for a bipartisan investigat­ion are reasonable or defensible.

If they are not, then doesn’t it automatica­lly follow that Republican­s are the ones to blame for the collapse of a bipartisan select committee?

is on Twitter, @Theplumlin­egs. For another view on this, see Henry Olsen’s column in Saturday’s opinion section.

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