The Day

King loses committee posts over race remarks

-

Washington (AP) — Veteran Republican Rep. Steve King will be blocked from committee assignment­s for the next two years after lamenting that white supremacy and white nationalis­m have become offensive terms.

King, in his ninth term representi­ng Iowa, will not be given committee assignment­s in the Congress that began this month, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said Monday night. King served on the Agricultur­e, Small Business and Judiciary committees in the last Congress, and he chaired Judiciary’s subcommitt­ee on the Constituti­on and Civil Justice.

McCarthy, R-Calif., called King’s remarks “beneath the dignity of the Party of Lincoln and the United States of America.”

King’s comments “call into question whether he will treat all Americans equally, without regard for race and ethnicity,” McCarthy said, adding: “House Republican­s are clear: We are all in this together, as fellow citizens equal before God and the law.”

The action by the GOP steering committee came after King and McCarthy met Monday to discuss the remarks on white supremacy, the latest in a years-long pattern of racially insensitiv­e remarks by King.

King called McCarthy’s decision to remove him from committees “a political decision that ignores the truth.” He vowed to “continue to point out the truth and work with all the vigor that I have to represent 4th District Iowans for at least the next two years.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell denounced King earlier Monday, saying, “There is no place in the Republican Party, the Congress or the country for an ideology of racial supremacy of any kind.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States