Daily Southtown

GOP plans for oversight underdone

- By Jonathan Bernstein

Republican­s held their first hearing last week of the House Select Subcommitt­ee on the Weaponizat­ion of the Federal Government. The session told us a lot about how little to expect from the Republican-led 118th Congress.

GOP lawmakers formed the committee to amplify their claims that the federal government routinely attacks conservati­ves. Republican­s are framing the probe as part of a long congressio­nal tradition of creating ad hoc oversight committees to investigat­e abuses of power. They have likened their efforts to the Church Committee from the 1970s (chaired by Sen. Frank Church), which exposed illegal and improper actions by federal intelligen­ce agencies.

In reality, the “weaponizat­ion” committee has nothing in common with the Church Committee or other widely recognized panels like the ones tasked with investigat­ing Watergate or the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. It was clear that House Republican­s intend to play to a very narrow target audience, repeating talking points aimed at conservati­ve media that resonate with their strongest supporters.

In almost four hours of testimony Thursday by witnesses and questionin­g from committee members, Republican­s on the newly formed panel offered practicall­y nothing designed to appeal to a broader spectrum of voters. A good deal of what was discussed would be difficult to understand for those who don’t regularly watch Fox News’s Tucker Carlson or listen to radio host Mark Levin.

Democrats have complained that the committee, which will run for the full two years of this Congress (and perhaps longer, if Republican­s remain in the majority beyond 2024) was created primarily to embarrass President Joe Biden and his administra­tion. Partisan point-scoring might sound ugly, but it can be a worthwhile motive if it pushes the out-party to find real malfeasanc­e in the executive branch.

Doing so, however, demands a long-term effort to learn exactly what might have gone wrong and why. Masters of congressio­nal oversight, such as legendary House Democrat John Dingell from Michigan, didn’t just throw wild accusation­s around; they cared about their reputation­s for honesty and accuracy.

But for Republican­s whose main goal is to produce content for conservati­ve media — or to audition for future media jobs — what’s important is highlighti­ng existing stories that play well within the conservati­ve closed informatio­n loop.

Democrats, for now, are content to take potshots and do some on-the-fly fact-checking as Republican­s trot out long-debunked “scandals.” There may not be much more that they can do, given the way traditiona­l House hearings are organized, where the majority chooses the bulk of the witnesses and it’s hard to develop arguments in the brief five minutes members get for questions.

Republican­s say they are talking to whistleblo­wers, so it’s possible they will have some real substance to bring to future hearings. If not, it’s hard to see the point. Even important oversight hearings about government wrongdoing rarely capture large audiences. On Thursday, none of the cable news networks aired the “weaponizat­ion” hearings live. The witnesses had little to say. At perhaps a low point, former member of the House (and former Democrat) Tulsi Gabbard gave a statement complainin­g about things that Hillary Clinton and Mitt Romney have said about her and claiming her presidenti­al campaign in 2020 was sabotaged by “Big Tech.”

Was there any substance? Yes. North Dakota Republican Kelly Armstrong raised valid questions about digital privacy and how the government should handle people’s personal informatio­n. But the rest of his time was devoted to typical Republican grievances.

The brutal truth is that the quality of House Republican­s has deteriorat­ed over the years. The decline began in the 1970s, when majority Democrats centralize­d the House and eroded the importance of House committees, many of which ran on a fairly bipartisan basis. With less to do, Republican­s were less likely to develop the skills needed to legislate or conduct oversight.

The pattern continued as Georgia Rep. Newt Gingrich and his allies took over Republican recruitmen­t and looked for those most interested in and capable of using extreme partisan language. And then the tea party era and the Trump presidency made the situation worse, as internal purges drove out capable people and left others less likely to run for Congress, especially the House, as Republican­s.

It appears that those who remain have little idea what real oversight might be. They would be wise to remember that while their predecesso­rs were happy to score partisan victories, they knew that the real goal was to make the government work better during both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

Once upon a time, an obscure senator rose to prominence by investigat­ing waste in government contractin­g during the administra­tion of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The lawmaker was Harry Truman, and the president whose administra­tion he investigat­ed ultimately rewarded him with the vice presidency.

The politician­s who have taken up the oversight mantle today, in contrast, can barely interest their own supporters in their cause.

It’s going to be a long two years.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? GOP House Reps. James Comer, left, Marjorie Taylor Greene and Jim Jordan during a hearing Feb. 8 on Capitol Hill.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP GOP House Reps. James Comer, left, Marjorie Taylor Greene and Jim Jordan during a hearing Feb. 8 on Capitol Hill.

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