Times-Call (Longmont)

Omar ousted from major committee

- By Kevin Freking and Lisa Mascaro

The Republican-led House voted after raucous debate Thursday to oust Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar from the chamber’s Foreign Affairs Committee, citing her anti-israel comments, in a dramatic response to Democrats last session booting far-right GOP lawmakers over incendiary remarks.

House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy was able to solidify Republican­s to take action against the Somaliborn Muslim in the new Congress although some GOP lawmakers had expressed reservatio­ns. Removal of lawmakers from House committees was essentiall­y unpreceden­ted until the Democratic ousters two years ago of hardright Republican Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul Gosar of Arizona.

The 218-211 vote, along party lines, came after a heated, voices-raised debate in which Democrats accused the GOP of going after Omar based on her race. Omar, who has apologized for 2019 remarks widely seen as antisemiti­c, defended herself on the House floor, asking if anyone was surprised she was being targeted. Democratic colleagues hugged her during the vote.

“My voice will get louder and stronger, and my leadership will be celebrated around the world, as it has been,” Omar said in a closing speech.

House Republican­s focused on six statements she has made that “under the totality of the circumstan­ces, disqualify her from serving on the Committee of Foreign Affairs,” said Rep. Michael Guest of Mississipp­i, the incoming chairman of the House Ethics

Committee.

“All members, both Republican­s and Democrats alike who seek to serve on Foreign Affairs, should be held to the highest standard of conduct due to the internatio­nal sensitivit­y and national security concerns under the jurisdicti­on of this committee,” Guest said.

Republican­s have clashed with Omar since she arrived in Congress, and former President Donald Trump frequently taunted her at his rallies in ways that appealed to his supporters.

The resolution proposed by Rep. Max Miller, R-ohio, a former official in the Trump administra­tion, declared, “Omar’s comments have brought dishonor to the House of Representa­tives.”

Democratic

leader Hakeem

Jeffries of New York said Omar has at times “made mistakes” and used antisemiti­c tropes that were condemned by House Democrats four years ago. But that’s not what Thursday’s vote was about, he said.

“It’s about political revenge,” Jeffries said.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasiocort­ez, D-N.Y., went further, referring to the Sept. 11, 2001, attack as she called the GOP’S action part of one of the “disgusting legacies after 9/11, the targeting and racism against Muslim-americans throughout the United States of America. And this is an extension of that legacy.”

She added, “This is about targeting women of color.”

Mccarthy denied the Republican decision to oust Omar was a tit-for-tat after the Greene and Gosar removals under Democrats, though he had warned in late 2021 that such a response might be expected if Republican­s won back the House majority.

“This is nothing like the last Congress,” he said Thursday. He noted that Omar can remain on other panels, just not Foreign Affairs, after her anti-israel comments.

Omar is one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress. She is also the first to wear a hijab in the House chamber after floor rules were changed to allow members to wear head coverings for religious reasons.

She quickly generated controvers­y after joining Congress in 2019 with a pair of tweets that suggested lawmakers who supported Israel were motivated by money.

In the first, she criticized the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC. “It’s all about the Benjamins baby,” she wrote, invoking slang about $100 bills.

Asked on Twitter who she thought was paying members of Congress to support Israel, Omar responded, “AIPAC!”

Omar’s remarks sparked a public rebuke from then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats who made clear that she had oversteppe­d.

She soon apologized. “We have to always be willing to step back and think through criticism, just as I expect people to hear me when others attack me about my identity,”

Omar tweeted. “This is why I unequivoca­lly apologize.”

Also, in a May 2021 tweet, she made reference to Israel as “an apartheid state” over its treatment of Palestinia­ns.

Democrats rallied Thursday in a fiery defense of Omar and the experience­s she brings to the Congress.

“This clearly isn’t about what Ilhan Omar said as much as who she is — being a smart, outspoken Black woman of the Muslim faith is apparently the issue,” said Rep. Mark Pocan, D-wis.

Black, Latino and progressiv­e lawmakers in particular spoke of her unique voice in the House and criticized Republican­s for what they called a racist attack.

“Racist gaslightin­g,” said Rep. Cori Bush, D-MO. A “revenge resolution,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the chair of the progressiv­e caucus.

“It’s so painful to watch,” said Rep. Rashida Tlaib, Dmich., who joined Congress with Omar as the first two female Muslims elected to the House.

“To Congresswo­man Omar, I am so sorry that our country is failing you today through this chamber,” Tlaib said through tears. “You belong on that committee.”

In the weeks leading up to the vote, the chairman of the committee, Rep. Michael Mccaul of Texas, argued for excluding Omar from the panel during a recent closed-door meeting with fellow Republican­s.

“It’s just that her worldview of Israel is so diametrica­lly opposed to the committee’s,” Mccaul told reporters in describing his stance. “I don’t mind having difference­s of opinion, but this goes beyond that.”

At the White House, press secretary Karine Jeanpierre said of the ouster, “It’s a political stunt.”

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-minn., talks to reporters as she leaves the House chamber at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday. House Republican­s have voted to oust Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The vote in a raucous session on Thursday to remove the Somali-born Muslim lawmaker came after her past comments critical of Israel.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-minn., talks to reporters as she leaves the House chamber at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday. House Republican­s have voted to oust Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The vote in a raucous session on Thursday to remove the Somali-born Muslim lawmaker came after her past comments critical of Israel.

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