South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Tension between parties at US Capitol

Virus restrictio­ns, fallout from riot frustrate lawmakers

- By Lisa Mascaro

The legislativ­e branch has become an increasing­ly toxic and unsettled place since the Jan. 6 riot.

WASHINGTON — The mood is so bad at the U.S. Capitol that a Democratic congressma­n recently let an elevator pass him by rather than ride with Republican colleagues who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s election.

Republican­s say it’s Democrats who just need to get over it — move on from the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, end the COVID19 restrictio­ns and make an effort to reach across the aisle toward bipartisan­ship.

Not yet 100 days into the new Congress, the legislativ­e branch has become an increasing­ly toxic and unsettled place, with lawmakers frustrated by the work-fromhome limits imposed by the virus and suspicious of each other after the horrific riot over Trump’s presidency.

Particular­ly in the House, which remains partly shuttered by the pandemic and where lawmakers heard gunshots ring out during the siege, trust is low, settled facts about the riot are apparently up for debate and wary, exhausted lawmakers are unsure how or when the “People’s House” will return to normal.

The first months of the year have laid bare the toxic scars from the historic, unpreceden­ted events. The fallout extends far beyond the broken windows and gouged walls of the iconic Capitol building to the loss that comes from the absence of usual routines and visitors that were the daily hum of democracy. With virtual meetings and socially distanced votes, lawmakers have fewer opportunit­ies to talk to each other, share ideas and ease fears in the aftermath of the riot.

“The mood is toxic,” said Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill.

It came to a pressure point last week when a dozen Republican­s voted against awarding the Congressio­nal Gold Medal to law enforcemen­t who defended the Capitol, in part because the resolution mentioned the “insurrecti­onists” who attacked the “temple” of American democracy. Democrats were stunned.

Despite the charged atmosphere, the House is forging ahead with Biden’s agenda, the Democratic majority ushering the $1.9 trillion virus relief bill into law without support from a single Republican. The tensions are delaying, but not stalling, fast action on voting rights and gun background checks, but leaving the potential for bipartisan­ship with Biden an open question.

One certainty is that the last president has left an indelible mark on the legislativ­e branch.

Donald Trump’s brand of politics is reshaping the Republican Party as lawmakers mimic his style. GOP lawmakers mostly downplay the insurrecti­on as simply a “protest,” even as 300 people have been charged in the attack. Republican­s dismiss the House coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, despite public health guidelines urging vaccinatio­ns, mask-wearing and social distancing.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said that at events he attended back home few people wear pandemic masks anymore and “the attitude is it’s time to get back to normal, get back to freedom.”

At the same time, dozens of lawmakers have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, and two elected officials, both Republican­s, have died from COVID-19.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., the minority leader, sent House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a letter recently saying the House should resume normal operations now that 75% of lawmakers are vaccinated. Pelosi responded Friday that the goal is “100%” compliance with vaccinatio­ns and social distancing guidelines.

One problem in resuming fully in-person operations at the Capitol is the lack of vaccinatio­ns for thousands of staff to the 435 House members. So far only two doses have been available for each House office, officials said. Six more doses are expected to be added as soon as this week.

The Senate, with 100 members, largely resumed its operations last spring.

For now, House proxy voting that was put in place to lessen lawmakers’ health risks of traveling to Washington will persist. Visitors are still off-limits at the Capitol.

“There are moments when I’m very excited and very happy; some really great things are happening,” said Massachuse­tts Rep. Jim McGovern, the Rules Committee chairman who skipped the elevator when he saw it was carrying Republican­s who challenged the presidenti­al vote.

But he said he was bothered by lawmakers who “try to somehow claim that this was an act of patriotic people coming to disagree? Give me a break.”

It’s clear that Democrats are more emotionall­y spent than House Republican­s, who bolstered their ranks in the last election despite Trump’s loss. Their gains narrowed the path to regaining House control in 2022.

While security fencing is set to be removed from the Capitol, metal detectors remain stationed outside the House chamber after some Republican lawmakers vowed to bring their firearms onto the House floor. Trust is low.

“Do you think?” said Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., among those who voted against the police medals. “Look at the metal detectors here — we have to get squeegeed.”

Rep. Norma Torres, D-Calif., said she has spent sleepless nights replaying the attack scenes in her mind.

“If we want to get back to normal,” she said, “we have to be better than we are.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? National Guard soldiers open a gate of the perimeter fence around the U.S. Capitol this month in Washington. Security fencing is set to be removed from the Capitol, but metal detectors remain stationed outside the House chamber.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP National Guard soldiers open a gate of the perimeter fence around the U.S. Capitol this month in Washington. Security fencing is set to be removed from the Capitol, but metal detectors remain stationed outside the House chamber.

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