Chattanooga Times Free Press

DC prepares for ‘robust oversight’ after criminal code revision fiasco

- BY ASHRAF KHALIL

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s signature on a bill nullifying an overhaul of the District of Columbia criminal code ended a public fight between Congress and local lawmakers. But the battles are only just beginning.

Already House Republican­s are pledging to increase congressio­nal interventi­on in local D.C. affairs. House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., has pledged that his committee “stands ready to conduct robust oversight of America’s capital city.”

D.C. Council members sound like they fully believe those promises.

“I’m afraid that we’re going to see more of this for the remainder of this Congress,” D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said earlier this month in advance of a Senate vote to overrule the city government and block the District’s new crime laws. “Does this raise a concern that there are going to be other issues? Yes.”

The criminal code saga has left District lawmakers bitterly nursing their political wounds, harboring fresh resentment­s against national Democrats, some of whom supported the criminal code nullificat­ion, and bracing to play defense against the activist Republican­controlled House for at least the next two years.

And that robust oversight has already begun. Even before Biden signed the crime bill override on Monday, the House Oversight Committee sent letters summoning Mendelson, D.C. Councilmem­ber Charles Allen and D.C. Chief Financial Officer Glen Lee to testify at a March 29 hearing. The topic of that hearing, according to the letter, is the vague “general oversight of the District of Columbia, including crime, safety, and city management.”

Other House Republican­s have already identified areas of interest to target. Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia has introduced a resolution to block a separate D.C. law — a police accountabi­lity measure known as the Comprehens­ive Policing and Justice Reform Amendment Act.

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