CONGRESS
Pelosi taps Kinzinger to serve on Jan. 6 select
panel
The Illinois Republican joins Rep. Liz Cheney, another
GOP critic of Donald Trump, on the select committee.
By JESSE NARANJO
and OLIVIA BEAVERS
07/25/2021
10:12 AM EDT
Updated:
07/25/2021 12:42 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/25/pelosi-kinzinger-jan-6-investigation-500721
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi formally tapped Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois — a rare
Donald Trump antagonist in his party — to the select panel investigating the
Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection as part of a boosted Republican presence.
Kinzinger
joins Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) in serving on the Democratic-led panel, which is
designed to examine the circumstances surrounding the violent assault of Trump
supporters on the Capitol earlier this year, including the actions of the
former president.
Pelosi in a
statement said Kinzinger “brings great patriotism to the Committee’s mission:
to find the facts and protect our Democracy.”
The
addition of Kinzinger looked increasingly likely in recent days, with Pelosi
teasing the appointment Sunday morning on ABC’s "This Week,"
acknowledging that naming Kinzinger would be part of her “plan.”
Kinzinger
in a statement described it as a duty to the country: “When duty calls, I will
always answer.”
“I will
work diligently to ensure we get to the truth and hold those responsible for
the attack fully accountable,” reads Kinzinger’s appointment. “This moment
requires a serious, clear-eyed, non-partisan approach. We are duty-bound to conduct
a full investigation on the worst attack on the Capitol since 1814 and to make
sure it can never happen again.”
The
appointment followed Pelosi’s rejection of two of House Minority Leader Kevin
McCarthy’s picks to serve on the panel: Reps. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) and Jim Jordan
(R-Ohio). Both are aggressive defenders of the former president, and they were
already gearing up to shift the focus onto Democrats, rather than Trump and
their party. The GOP leader opted to pull all five of his picks and boycott the
panel, which includes Cheney and seven Democrats picked by Pelosi, in response
to her vetoes.
“I wanted
to appoint three of the members that Leader McCarthy suggested, but he withdrew
their names,” she said, referring to Reps. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), Kelly
Armstrong (R-N.D.) and Troy Nehls (R-Texas). “The two that I would not appoint
are people who would jeopardize the integrity of the investigation, and there's
no way I would tolerate their antics as we seek the truth.”
Pelosi
previously said that the decision to block Jordan’s and Banks’ appointments was
unrelated to their votes against certification of Trump's loss to President Joe
Biden. Nehls also objected to certification, but was not rejected by the
speaker.
POLITICO
previously reported that Kinzinger has discussed his desire to serve on the
committee, which so far counts Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney as its sole Republican
member. Cheney was unseated as House Republicans' No. 3 leader by her
colleagues in May after criticizing the former president and his false claims
about election fraud.
With
Kinzinger joining his friend Cheney on the select panel, Democrats will be able
to tout the involvement of two traditional conservatives in a bipartisan
inquiry. Nonetheless, the findings of the panel will likely be rejected by
Trump's allies, who have blasted the panel as a partisan ploy designed to hurt him
and the party ahead of the midterms next year.
And while
House Republicans decry the select committee as stacked against them, citing
the involvement of three former House Democratic impeachment managers and an
uneven balance of seats, all but 35 of them rejected a bipartisan 9/11-style
commission earlier this year after one of their own struck a deal with
Democrats. A few GOP lawmakers have joined Democrats in reminding fellow
Republicans of that reality after Pelosi's veto of Banks and Jordan sparked
fury on their side of the aisle.
Banks, who
would have been the panel's top Republican before Pelosi nixed him, charged
Sunday that the speaker had "predetermined a narrative" for the
investigation and sought to silence Republicans who planned to ask about
security failures at the Capitol on Jan. 6.
"It's
clear that Pelosi only wants members on this committee who will stick to her
talking points and stick to her narrative," Banks said in an interview
with "Fox News Sunday." "That's why she's picked the group that
she's already picked, and anyone that she asks to be on this committee from
this point moving forward will be stuck to her narrative, to her point of view.
There won't be another side."
Republicans
have vowed to spotlight what they claim are Pelosi-driven lapses in Capitol
security that helped worsen the riot. The Capitol security officials who were
in charge on Jan. 6 had both been hired by Republican leaders.
Pelosi on
Sunday rejected the claim by some Republicans that her decision to veto some of
the GOP appointees could sow more division in the country.
“Republicans
will say what they will say,” she said. “Our select committee will seek the
truth. It's our patriotic duty to do so. We do not come into our work worried
about what the other side who has been afraid of this — maybe the Republicans
can't handle the truth, but we have a responsibility to seek it, to find it in
a way that retains the confidence of the American people.”
Democrats
have indicated that Cheney will be able to hire her own staff for the
investigation, though it's not clear how much leeway she'll have there. Former
Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-Va.), a Cheney ally with experience investigating
online extremism, is being eyed as her outside adviser for the inquiry.
Connor
O'Brien contributed to this report.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário