San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INDICTMENT FUROR MAY FUEL SPENDING FIGHT

Some Republican­s ramp up push to cut DOJ funding

- BY CARL HULSE Hulse writes for The New York Times.

The political furor over the indictment this past week of former President Donald Trump over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election is spilling into the escalating congressio­nal spending fight as conservati­ves, following the former president’s lead, take aim at federal law enforcemen­t agencies, raising yet another obstacle to avoiding a government shutdown.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the far-right Georgia Republican who has become a close ally of Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, reacted to the indictment by vowing to try to cut funding for special counsel Jack Smith while suggesting she would oppose other law enforcemen­t spending measures as well. With Republican­s pressing for deep spending cuts and social policy requiremen­ts that have alienated Democrats, they will likely have only four votes in their own party to spare, meaning just a handful of defections could sink the bills.

“This is nothing but a political assassinat­ion, and I will not vote to fund a communist regime,” Greene said in a statement after the latest indictment of Trump, the front-runner in the Republican presidenti­al primary race. “I will not vote to fund a weaponized government while it politicall­y persecutes not only President Trump but all conservati­ve Americans.”

Her broadside echoed one by Trump himself, who after pleading not guilty in April to 34 felony charges in Manhattan alleging that he orchestrat­ed a hushmoney scheme to pave his path to the presidency and then sought to cover it up, called for cutting funding of the Justice Department on his social media platform.

“REPUBLICAN­S IN CONGRESS SHOULD DEFUND THE DOJ AND FBI UNTIL THEY COME TO THEIR SENSES,” he wrote then.

Any attempt by the House to do his bidding would be dead on arrival in the Democratic-led Senate and at President Joe Biden’s White House. But Republican unrest over the indictment appears to have injected a powerful new political incentive into the struggle over spending, increasing Republican­s’ appetite for a shutdown fight. That could present a difficult new dynamic for Mccarthy as he seeks to placate the conservati­ve wing of his party while avoiding a lapse in government funding on Oct. 1.

House Democrats uniformly oppose the emerging spending bills since they are below the spending levels agreed to by Biden and Mccarthy in their deal to suspend the federal debt limit and contain numerous conservati­ve policy riders they find objectiona­ble.

Should conservati­ves prevail in their insistence on even deeper cuts and other restrictio­ns on federal law enforcemen­t, it could drive off more mainstream Republican votes. If conservati­ves such as Greene do not get what they want and oppose the legislatio­n, Mccarthy would face a painful dilemma: Either allow the spending measures to fail and force a government shutdown for which his party would almost certainly be blamed, or cooperate with Democrats to pass the bills and put his leadership position at risk.

The conservati­ve animosity toward the FBI is a stark break with the traditiona­l Republican orthodoxy of strong support for law enforcemen­t. It has little traction in the Senate, where Democrats and Republican­s have been working in a bipartisan fashion to advance spending bills for considerat­ion when the Senate returns next month.

“I do not believe that there will be support in the Senate for defunding the FBI despite its mistakes outlined by the inspector general, nor do I believe that an effort to restrict the Department of Justice would be successful,” said Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the top Republican on the Appropriat­ions Committee, referring to a 2019 report on the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into links between Russia and Trump campaign aides in 2016. “Our country is experienci­ng a crime wave, and we are in the midst of a serious drug epidemic. We need more law enforcemen­t officers, not fewer.”

When Congress returns in September, the House and Senate will have just a few weeks to try to pass their spending bills and reconcile their significan­t difference­s before the Sept. 30 deadline marking the end of the fiscal year.

If that is not accomplish­ed, Congress would need to pass a stopgap spending bill to avoid a shutdown.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy will likely seek to placate the conservati­ve wing of his party while avoiding a lapse in government funding on Oct. 1.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy will likely seek to placate the conservati­ve wing of his party while avoiding a lapse in government funding on Oct. 1.

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