House Oversight a gavel no one wants
It’s the gavel that no one wants.
Not a single GOP lawmaker has launched a bid to replace retiring Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) as chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, the panel with investigatory powers over the Trump administration.
{mosads}The lack of interest in the gavel underscores how politically tricky and toxic many Republicans view the job.
Most Republicans have no desire to lead a committee whose central charge would be investigating a Republican administration — particularly one led by the volatile President Trump, who strikes back fiercely at critics.
Former Oversight Chairman Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) decided shortly after Trump took office it was better for him to quit Congress than to face pressure to investigate a Republican-run White House. Now Gowdy, less than a year into his chairmanship, is following Chaffetz out the door.
No one is throwing their hat in the ring for Gowdy’s chairmanship “probably because it’s a Republican president,” conceded Rep. Dennis Ross (R-Fla.), a member of the panel.
When pressed by The Hill, Ross, a senior deputy whip who’s close to leadership, said he would “seriously consider” a bid for Oversight chairman given Gowdy’s decision to leave Congress.
But until now, Ross had not publicly discussed his plans and has not made any final decisions. The Florida Republican also seemed to suggest that, as chairman, he would be more focused on the “government reform” aspect of the committee rather than launching high-profile congressional probes into the Trump administration.
“We’ve got a lot of reforms we need to address, including postal reform. Postal is something that needs to be taken care of. I chaired that subcommittee six years ago,” Ross said in an interview just off the House floor. “You don’t have to always have investigative hearings, [though] that’s a component of it.”
After Chaffetz resigned from Congress last summer, Rep. Steve Russell (R-Okla.) unsuccessfully challenged the better-known Gowdy for the Oversight gavel. When contacted by The Hill, Russell said in a statement he “remain[s] interested in the chairmanship,” though he is low on the seniority food chain and appears to be hanging back for now.
The two most senior members of the committee — former Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and Rep. John Duncan Jr. (R-Tenn.) — are not running for reelection. GOP Rep. Ron DeSantis is running for Florida governor this cycle.
And a former member of leadership, Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.), said she has no desire to trade her Education and the Workforce Committee gavel for the Oversight one.
“No!” Foxx replied, before chuckling at the suggestion.
When recently asked by The Hill who is running to replace him, Gowdy stopped outside the House chamber and paused for a moment.
“I don’t know who is,” he said. “I haven’t heard anyone announced. If they have, I have not heard it.”
Gowdy cautioned that the race is “still so far off” and that it’s unknown whether the GOP will even hang on to the majority, which he thought could be deterring folks from throwing their hats into the ring so early — though that clearly hasn’t stopped members from vying for the House Appropriations Committee gavel that’s also up for grabs next cycle.
During his short, eight-month stint atop the panel, Gowdy has decided against holding Oversight hearings into possible Russian collusion with the Trump campaign or the series of scandals that have beset Trump’s Cabinet.
Just two weeks after his stunning announcement he was done with Congress, however, Gowdy appeared on CNN to say his committee had just opened a congressional probe into the FBI’s security clearance process and why former White House aide Rob Porter had kept his job after his two ex-wives accused him of domestic violence.
Gowdy, 53, a former federal prosecutor, said he was leaving Congress because he misses the justice system and likes “jobs where facts matter” and “where fairness matters.”
Members of the powerful Republican Steering Committee — a 32-person panel comprising Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), leadership allies and regional representatives — will select a new slate of GOP committee chairs after the 2018 midterm elections. (The Steering Committee will pick ranking members in the event that Republicans lose control of the House.)
But, so far, Steering Committee members said they’ve received no phone calls or text messages from potential candidates lobbying for the job.
“I haven’t heard from anyone,” said one Steering Committee member.
Republicans are making a much more aggressive play for the Appropriations Committee gavel, which carries enormous influence over how hundreds of billions of federal dollars are spent each year.
On Jan. 29, the day Appropriations Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.) said he would leave Congress right in the middle of his tenure, a trio of Republicans — Reps. Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.), Kay Granger (R-Texas) and Tom Cole (R-Okla.) — quickly launched campaigns to replace him.
A fourth, Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), said that same day he was seriously thinking about joining the race. And Rep. Tom Graves (R-Ga.) formally jumped in the Appropriations race last week.
There are also some other politics at play in the race for the Oversight gavel.
The panel is packed with members of the far-right House Freedom Caucus. In fact, the five most senior Oversight members who will be returning to Congress next year are Freedom Caucus lawmakers. They are, in order of seniority: former Freedom Caucus Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Reps. Mark Sanford (R-S.C.), Justin Amash (R-Mich.), Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) and Scott DesJarlais (R-Tenn.). Current Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) is also on the committee.
But the leadership-aligned Steering Committee has a track record of denying Freedom Caucus members committee gavels.
“I don’t know that Freedom Caucus members’ chances on the Steering Committee are always that good, but we’ll see,” Jordan told The Hill.
He added that he and other Freedom Caucus members would like to see the GOP rules changed to give members of a particular committee more say in choosing their own chair. Such a move would shift power away from leadership.
“Because if that were the case, I’d be in a pretty good position,” Jordan said. “We’re going to look at it later.”
Another possible candidate is Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.), whose term as Republican Study Committee chairman ends this year. But in an interview, Walker said he’s given the post no thought.
“I’ve had no major discussions on that whatsoever. I’ve not even thought of it because of my work as Republican Study Committee chair,” said Walker, who may be eyeing a leadership post higher up the GOP ladder.
Walker said he was fully supportive of Gowdy’s probe into Porter and possible weaknesses in the FBI background-check process for White House employees who handle sensitive information and documents.
“If you’ve got a history of physical or spousal abuse, you should never be in a position of service that’s making judgment calls,” Walker said.
“I don’t work with anybody who I have more confidence in or believe there is a man of more integrity than Trey Gowdy. So when he signs off on something, he has my 100 percent support.”
Melanie Zanona contributed.
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