The Mercury News

House speaker is resorting to cynical stunts

- By Nicholas Goldberg Nicholas Goldberg is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

To hear the Republican­s tell it, the U.S. Constituti­on has been beaten, buffeted and willfully misconstru­ed by radical socialists and liberal Democrats who hope to twist it to encourage abortions, promote transgende­r rights and confiscate Americans' guns.

But have no fear, they say. Help is on the way! Since the new Republican majority took over the House of Representa­tives last month, the Constituti­on and the founding principles of American democracy are once again being defended and protected.

Here's how: First, new House Speaker Kevin McCarthy instructed members of Congress to read the entire document aloud from the floor of the House, which they did for 43 minutes last week. That'll fix things! McCarthy kicked off the show himself, reading the preamble.

Then, Republican­s on the Judiciary Committee, led by Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, put in place a new rule requiring that the Pledge of Allegiance be recited before each committee meeting. (Unfortunat­ely, Gaetz accidental­ly invited an accused murderer awaiting trial to lead it the first day, according to the Daily Beast.)

Next, the House passed a resolution denouncing “the horrors of socialism” and opposing the implementa­tion of socialist policies in the United States. Republican­s were apparently trying to tie progressiv­e Democrats to the likes of Pol Pot, Josef Stalin and Kim Jong Un.

And finally, for good measure, the GOP leadership removed the metal detectors outside the House chamber. It seems that some Republican­s had argued that their Second Amendment right to carry guns wherever they go was being infringed.

You may not have been aware this was a contentiou­s issue on Capitol Hill. But it seems that after the events of Jan. 6, 2021, several metal detectors were installed to help enforce the rule that guns are prohibited on the floor of the House.

This didn't go over well with members of the lunatic fringe of the GOP.

Colorado Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert, for instance, on at least one occasion refused to hand her bag over to Capitol Police to be searched even after it set off the magnetomet­er. Boebert is an outspoken gun rights enthusiast who often carries a Glock pistol.

Several Republican members of Congress were fined for bypassing the metal detectors.

Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, then the leader of the House Freedom Caucus, told Axios that “I'm fine” with members carrying guns around the Capitol. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said she's against “ALL gun-free zones.”

But surely we can agree that security is serious business at the Capitol?

Nope, apparently we can't even agree on that.

The Capitol was the scene of violence even before Jan. 6, 2021.

In 1954, four Puerto Rican nationalis­ts entered the House gallery with handguns and opened fire, wounding five congressme­n on the House floor.

There have been other duels, shootings, fistfights and attacks in the Capitol and on its grounds over the years, including bombings in 1971 and 1983.

More recently, in 2022, the Capitol Police investigat­ed some 7,500 threats against members of Congress. ThenRep. Gabrielle Giffords, DAriz., was shot in 2011 and Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., was shot in 2017, though neither of those shootings happened on Capitol grounds.

What goes on on Capitol Hill these days is truly demoralizi­ng. Vicious, counterpro­ductive politics rule the day. Even as we recover from two recent impeachmen­ts, a mob assault on the Capitol and a near constituti­onal crisis, the United States faces daunting military, economic, health and environmen­tal threats that require immediate, concerted attention.

Surely there's a way to meet those challenges that would be more effective than reading tendentiou­sly from the country's founding documents, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance several times a day, denouncing a nonexisten­t socialist threat and inviting members to bring guns onto the floor of Congress.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? At first, Speaker Kevin McCarthy wanted House members to read the Constituti­on aloud.
ALEX BRANDON— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At first, Speaker Kevin McCarthy wanted House members to read the Constituti­on aloud.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States