CONGRESS
Senate GOP moderates fume as McConnell prepares
to block Jan. 6 commission
“Is that really what this is about, that everything is
just one election cycle after another?" lamented Sen. Lisa Murkowski
(R-Alaska).
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell walks to the chamber.
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell walks to the chamber. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Photo
By BURGESS
EVERETT
05/27/2021
01:00 PM EDT
Updated:
05/27/2021 10:24 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/27/republicans-to-block-january-6-commission-491162
During
Thursday's Senate Republican lunch, Sen. Susan Collins made one last plea to
her colleagues to advance a proposed independent commission to probe the
Capitol riot, with changes she fought for. Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell spoke right after her.
And the GOP
leader is set to win the day, much to the consternation of a handful of his
members who fear the party is making a mistake in voting down the House-passed
commission bill sometime Friday. After an increasingly hard public and private
push from McConnell, Senate Republicans are ready to make the independent
investigation into the Capitol attack their first filibuster of the Biden
administration.
Collins
kept trying to whip up 10 votes to break a filibuster on Thursday and said in
an interview that she wouldn’t “give up." But McConnell didn’t let her go
un-rebutted at the conference's closed-door meeting, and Collins was resigned
to the short-term failure of her efforts at compromise.
“It would
be so much better if we had an independent outside commission," the Maine
Republican said.
Conservative
objections to moving forward on an unrelated competitiveness bill pushed the Jan.
6 bill into Friday. The vote on the commission will take place after the Senate
completes its work on that bill.
Collins has
a familiar ally in speaking out against the minority leader's push. Sen. Lisa
Murkowski (R-Alaska) argued Thursday night that her party should look
“critically” at the decision to block the commission bill, warning against
“making a decision for the short-term political gain at the expense of
understanding and acknowledging what was in front of us on Jan. 6.”
She
acknowledged that an outside inquiry into the pro-Trump attack on Congress
could be a painful — and political — exercise, but still a worthwhile one.
“I don’t
want to know. But I need to know. And I think it’s important for the country
that there be an independent evaluation,” Murkowski said. “Is that really what
this is about, that everything is just one election cycle after another?"
Several
undecided Republicans came down against advancing the commission ahead of the
vote, despite Collins' work for changes to strengthen the proposed commission's
bipartisan staffing and trim its timetable. The growing tide against the House
bill, which passed with 35 Republican votes, came as McConnell dismissed the
commission idea on Thursday.
“I do not
believe the additional extraneous commission that Democratic leaders want would
uncover crucial new facts or promote healing. Frankly I do not believe it is
even designed to do that,” he said on Thursday morning.
McConnell
has argued that advancing the commission is unlikely to reveal things not
already dug up by existing probes, including those by lawmakers themselves. And
he’s also argued internally to his conference that a lengthy commission
wouldn't be good politics heading into the midterms, contending it could
uncover damaging revelations related to former President Donald Trump that
would hurt Republicans.
The GOP
leader turned up his effort to stop the commission eight days ago, after saying
his party was undecided on the House bill. By Thursday, Senate Minority Whip
John Thune of South Dakota said in an interview that his party is not willing
to provide the 10 votes needed to start debate on the bill: “The House-passed
version won’t have 10,” Thune said.
The
expected GOP blockade will cloud the atmosphere in Washington. Republicans have
not blocked any of Democrats' bills on the Senate floor so far this year, until
the commission vote.
Democrats
say they have made major concessions to the GOP on the structure of the
commission, with their party's House leaders even blessing Collins’ changes.
The resulting frustration is palpable, among even the most amiable Democrats.
Sen. Jon
Tester (D-Mont.) said he believes there will be a future Jan. 6-style attack on
the Capitol and “the outcome is going to be far worse.”
“We’ve got
to get to the bottom of this shit,” Tester said. “Jesus. It’s a nonpartisan
investigation of what happened. And if it’s because they’re afraid of Trump
then they need to get out of office. It’s bullshit. You make tough decisions in
this office or you shouldn’t be here.”
McConnell
seemed to lock up the 41 votes against that he needed despite a last-minute
pro-commission lobbying push by the mother and girlfriend of fallen Capitol
Police officer Brian Sicknick, who died after responding to the siege. Collins
and Murkowski were among the Republicans they met.
Murkowski
recalled meeting with the women close to Sicknick after they spoke with a
senator who opposed the commission; she told them she was “heartsick that you
feel that you need to come and advocate to members of Congress.”
Sens. Jerry
Moran of Kansas and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia both said they will
not support the commission.
“We have
other committees looking at this. We’ll get our answers,” Capito said.
Even Sen.
Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, who voted to convict Trump of inciting an
insurrection, was unsure where he would come down. Sen. Richard Burr of North
Carolina, who also backed convicting Trump, has argued inside the GOP
conference against the commission and said that, even with an expiration date
of Dec. 31, it would drag into the midterms.
Sen. Rob
Portman of Ohio, who has considered supporting Collins’ changes, said he wanted
a commission to have the “legitimacy and the trust of the American people by
being fair. If it’s not fair. It’s not going to be effective.”
He declined
to say how he would vote. The Senate is currently considering a China
competitiveness bill but is expected to vote on the commission before going on
Memorial Day recess.
Sen. Mitt
Romney of Utah, who supports the House-passed commission bill, said his
colleagues were entitled to their opinions. “I have a different point of view
than some of my colleagues, but we're entitled to do that and I'm not
frustrated by it,” he said.
Once the
commission is blocked, several congressional committees will still be looking
at the matter. But Collins said the thinks there will still be a new panel in
Congress.
And that
entity won't be as credible to her as the one her party chose to reject.
“The most
likely outcome, sadly, is probably the Democratic leaders will appoint a select
committee. We’ll have a partisan investigation. It won’t have credibility with
people like me, but the press will cover it because that’s what’s going on,”
Collins said.
Nicholas Wu
contributed to this report.
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