Los Angeles Times

Schiff, Swalwell nomination­s set up fight in House

- By Nolan D. McCaskill

WASHINGTON — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries renominate­d two California Democrats to serve on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, setting up a clash with Speaker Kevin McCarthy over committee assignment­s he has vowed to block.

In the last Congress, Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank) chaired the committee, and Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Dublin) led its Intelligen­ce Modernizat­ion and Readiness Subcommitt­ee, but McCarthy has long signaled that Schiff, Swalwell and Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) would lose their committee assignment­s if he became speaker.

His threat followed moves by his predecesso­r, Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), Democrats and a few Republican­s to strip Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) of their committee assignment­s when Democrats were in control.

“It is my understand­ing that you intend to break with the longstandi­ng House tradition of deference to the minority party Intelligen­ce Committee recommenda­tions and deny seats to Ranking Member Schiff and Representa­tive Swalwell,” Jeffries wrote in a letter to McCarthy over the weekend. “The denial of seats to duly elected Members of the House Democratic Caucus runs counter to the serious and sober mission of the Intelligen­ce Committee.”

Jeffries (D-N.Y) noted Greene and Gosar were removed from their committee assignment­s in the last Congress “after a bipartisan vote of the House found them unfit to serve on standing committees for directly inciting violence against their colleagues.”

Greene was removed from her committee assignment­s in 2021 over racist rhetoric and supporting violence against Democrats. Gosar faced punishment in November 2021 after posting, and later deleting, a cartoon video with his face superimpos­ed on a character who kills someone with Rep. Alexandria OcasioCort­ez’s (D-N.Y.) face and wields swords against President Biden.

“It does not serve as precedent or justificat­ion for the removal of Representa­tives Schiff and Swalwell, given that they have never exhibited violent thoughts or behavior,” Jeffries said.

McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) has accused Schiff, the lead manager during the first impeachmen­t of President Trump, of lying to the public about certain details related to a whistleblo­wer report that triggered the investigat­ion, and of dismissing emails found on a laptop allegedly owned by Hunter Biden as a Russian ploy.

McCarthy has argued that Swalwell couldn’t get a security clearance in the private sector following a report that he was targeted by a suspected Chinese spy, with whom he later cut ties.

In a letter to the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, Schiff wrote that “it is not for Kevin McCarthy to decide to remove Members from Committees based on smears and falsehoods. Whether that means Ilhan Omar or Eric Swalwell or myself, there is no basis for his threatened retaliatio­n other than placating the most extreme members of his party.”

In a separate letter, Swalwell similarly said it “is not for the Speaker to decide to remove Members from committees based on fabricated stories or political revenge.”

McCarthy’s office declined to comment Monday.

On Monday evening, McCarthy announced the GOP members who will serve on the Intelligen­ce Committee, including the newly added Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Santa Clarita.) The speaker gave no indication about when he would announce his decision on the panel’s Democratic members.

McCarthy has the authority to reject Democrats nominated to serve on the Intelligen­ce panel because the speaker has the final say over membership of select committees.

Removing Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee would require a full floor vote. Threats to remove Omar from the panel followed antisemiti­c comments she made and later apologized for.

Greene will serve on the Homeland Security Committee, Gosar will serve on the Natural Resources Committee, and both will have a seat on the Oversight and Accountabi­lity Committee.

Greene became a top ally of McCarthy and pushed her conservati­ve colleagues in the House Freedom Caucus to support his bid for speaker, which ultimately required 15 votes over four days. Gosar began voting for McCarthy on the 12th ballot.

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