Marin Independent Journal

House GOP probes how Biden officials responded to parents

- By Luke Broadwater

Republican­s on Friday issued their first subpoenas of the Biden administra­tion since taking control of the House, demanding documents for an investigat­ion into whether the government mistreated parents who were scrutinize­d after school officials endured threats and harassment over mask mandates and teaching about racism.

Just two days after the Judiciary Committee was organized for the new Congress, Rep. Jim Jordan, ROhio and the panel's chair, sent subpoenas to Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, accusing them of withholdin­g informatio­n about whether the government overreache­d in scrutinizi­ng parents.

It was a clear signal that leaders of the new Republican-controlled House, who have said they will investigat­e the “weaponizat­ion” of government against conservati­ves, are wasting little time in using their power to take aim at the Biden administra­tion and plan to use their gavels to stoke culture wars over divisive issues.

Politicall­y charged debates over coronaviru­s mandates and the teaching of the history of racism in the United States have become particular­ly bitter flash points in schools in recent years, opening school board members, educators and administra­tors to increasing­ly fearsome threats and harassment. Republican­s contend that in investigat­ing some of those incidents, the Justice Department has victimized and attempted to silence conservati­ve parents.

“They all get investigat­ed. FBI shows up at their door. Guess how many have been charged? How many have been charged? Zero,” Jordan said Sunday on NBC's “Meet the Press,” saying the homes of 25 parents were visited. “They show up at your house. Now, you don't think that has a chilling impact on other parents?”

Democrats dismissed the subpoenas as posturing driven by misinforma­tion.

“The conspiracy theories underpinni­ng today's subpoenas have been debunked with facts time and time again, but Republican­s do not want to be bothered by this inconvenie­nt truth,” said Rep. Stacey Plaskett of the Virgin Islands, the top Democrat on the newly created Subcommitt­ee on the Weaponizat­ion of the Federal Government.

The subpoenas, reviewed by The New York Times, seek documents and communicat­ions related to the “alleged threats posed by concerned parents at local school board meetings” and Garland's decision to deploy federal law enforcemen­t officials nationwide to address instances where there were threats and harassment of educators. They also request documents related to a 2021 letter sent by the National School Boards Associatio­n to President Joe Biden raising concerns about rising threats against school board members over coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and critical race theory, a legal framework primarily taught in graduate schools that examines racism as a social construct embedded in institutio­ns.

The subpoenas require the documents to be produced by March 1.

Beginning in October of 2021, Republican­s on the Judiciary Committee, then in the minority, sent dozens of letters to the Biden administra­tion demanding internal executive branch documents about the investigat­ion of parents. But with Republican­s lacking subpoena power, the Justice Department did not provide them.

The GOP investigat­ion began after the National School Boards Associatio­n wrote to Biden in September 2021 about a “growing number of threats and acts of intimidati­on” against school board members over what the associatio­n called false propaganda stirred up by a misinforma­tion campaign.

“The classifica­tion of these heinous crimes could be the equivalent of a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes,” the associatio­n wrote.

Days later, Garland instructed the FBI to meet with local officials to discuss “strategies for addressing threats against school administra­tors, board members, teachers and staff.”

In a report late last year, Jordan said whistleblo­wers provided Republican­s with evidence that the FBI opened investigat­ions “into one mom for allegedly telling a local school board `we are coming for you' and a dad simply because he `rails against the government' and `has a lot of guns.'”

Jordan's subpoenas come after the Republican-controlled House voted along party lines to create the weaponizat­ion panel with the power to launch a widerangin­g investigat­ion into federal law enforcemen­t and national security agencies. Its first hearing is scheduled for Feb. 9.

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