The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Chaffetz’s abrupt, and welcome, exit

No sooner had U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, announced that he wouldn’t seek reelection in 2018 than he also allowed he likely wouldn’t serve out his current term. Chances are, no one is more anxious for him to leave Washington than residents of the ca

- — Editorial courtesy of The Washington Post

Chaffetz’s sudden decision, disclosed Wednesday on his Facebook page, shocked the political world. He had, after all, just won reelection and was seen as a likely candidate for the Senate. The always-suspect explanatio­n of wanting to spend more time with family seemed especially curious, given that he and his wife were about to become empty nesters. That he is choosing to walk away makes perfect sense, though, when viewed through the crass political considerat­ions that have marked his career.

Chaffetz rose to national prominence via his high-profile investigat­ions as chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. But the zeal for ferreting out supposed wrongdoing, which was on full display during the Obama administra­tion and when Hillary Clinton was running for office, was nowhere to be seen when Donald Trump took office and questions immediatel­y arose about conflicts of interest, violations of the emoluments clause or Russian connection­s. Now in the crosshairs of rising public discontent — becoming what the Deseret News called “the face of Republican fecklessne­ss” — Chaffetz apparently saw retreat to Utah, and possible preparatio­n for a run for governor, as the best way out.

Such expediency doesn’t come as a big surprise to D.C. officials and residents, since Chaffetz routinely tried to advance his political interests at their expense. How else to describe the hypocrisy of him holding himself out as an advocate for local control and less government while at the same trying to prevent the city from spending its local dollars and deciding local laws? In his first month in Congress in 2009, he testified against voting rights for the District, and in the following years he opposed budget autonomy, sought to overturn laws passed by the D.C. Council and once even threatened Mayor Muriel Bowser, D, with jail because of the city’s legalizati­on of marijuana.

The District is right to celebrate Chaffetz’s departure, but it should be wary. Those likely in line to take over as head of the oversight committee seem similarly antagonist­ic to the District. There is hope, though, in the fact that there have been Republican­s in charge of the committee — Rep. Darrell Issa, Calif., and former Rep. Tom Davis, Va. — who turned out to be advocates for equal and fair treatment of the District and its residents.

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 ?? CLIFF OWEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington.
CLIFF OWEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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