Not Everyone on the Benghazi Committee Was an Embarrassment

Not Everyone on the Benghazi Committee Was an Embarrassment

Not Everyone on the Benghazi Committee Was an Embarrassment

As Hillary Clinton made a powerful case for herself, Elijah Cummings made an equally powerful case against the committee’s hyper-partisanship.

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The US Congress has a number of disappointing members who grab the spotlight so frequently that it is easy to imagine that they define the institution.

But they are not always definitional.

That is because the House also has a few exceptional members who step into the spotlight only when it is necessary—and who, when they take that step, bring a measure of honor to otherwise desultory affairs.

That is what Maryland Congressman Elijah Cummings did Thursday, when he condemned the abuses of the Republican majority on the House Select Committee on Benghazi.

Hour after hour, at each and every necessary point, Cummings intervened—with appropriate and righteous indignation—to challenge the excesses of his conservative colleagues.

The Republicans kept him busy.

No one doubted that a session focusing on former secretary of state Hillary Clinton would see the most disappointing members of the committee embarrass themselves and the Congress.

And so they did.

The questions from committee chairman Trey Gowdy, R-South Carolina, and his minions were for the most part repeats of discredited campaign claims. Never mind that the basic premises advanced by the Republicans Thursday were rejected by the American people in 2012. After hearing a steady stream of Republican criticism of the administration’s response to the tragic events that led to the death of US Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, voters reelected President Obama and Vice President Biden with a 5 million popular vote margin and a 332-206 Electoral College landslide.

Obama and Biden are not running in 2016. But Clinton is.

Gowdy’s hearing developed such a sharp partisan edge that Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Carl Bernstein compared the “reckless” and “abusive” questioning with the approach seen during the “red-scare” circuses organized by Senator Joe McCarthy in the 1950s.

Things got so bad that, toward the end of the almost 11-hour hearing, Congresswoman Linda Sánchez, D-California, apologized to Clinton “for my Republican colleagues who apparently want to write your answers for you, or testify for you because I think it fits into their outlandish narrative of what happened.”

Clinton responded with a compelling and frequently poignant recollections of her State Department service in general and of her response to the Benghazi attacks in particular. So masterful was the former secretary of state’s testimony that, while it surely was not their intent, Gowdy and his minions ended up creating a day of theater that did more than any debate or campaign speech could to confirm Hillary Clinton’s readiness for the presidency.

Noting Clinton’s “presidential” style, author, and commentator Joy-Ann Reid said of the hearing, “This was an unabashed help to her.”

It is understandable that reviews of Thursday’s session will focus primarily on Clinton’s ownership of the day, and on the inability of Republican committee members to grab anything more than a few minutes of camera time. But some of the most striking presentations Thursday came from Democratic House members, such as Sanchez and Illinois Congresswoman Tammy Duckworth, and especially from Congressman Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the committee.

A senior Democrat with decades of experience as a leader of the Maryland House of Delegate and the US House of Representatives, Cummings serves as the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, where he has ably managed the egos of current chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and Darrell Issa, R-California. Cummings gets his share of attention, and respect. But as a veteran legislator who is committed to keeping the institutions of Congress functional and functioning, Cummings has looked for ways to work even with the most difficult partisans and to share the spotlight with members of his own caucus.

Cummings has always been recognized for his legal and legislative skills.

He displayed them on Thursday. Yet, he also displayed a passion that, in many senses, defined the day.

Cummings defended Clinton. But he also indicted the Republican majority on the committee for engaging in excessive and irresponsible partisanship.

The congressman from Maryland delivered a scathing opening statement:

This week, our Chairman, Mr. Gowdy, was interviewed for a lengthy media profile. During this interview, he complained that he has “an impossible job.” He said it is impossible to conduct a serious, fact-centric investigation in such a “political environment.”

I have great respect for the chairman, but on this score, he is wrong. In fact, it has been done by his own Republican colleagues in the House on this very issue—Benghazi.

The Republican Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee conducted an extensive, bipartisan, two-year investigation and issued a detailed report. The Senate Intelligence Committee and the Senate Homeland Security Committee also conducted bipartisan investigations.

Those bipartisan efforts respected and honored the memories of the four brave Americans who were killed in Benghazi: Ambassador Chris Stevens, Sean Smith, Tyrone Woods, and Glen Doherty.

The problem is that Speaker Boehner did not like the answers he got from those investigations. So he set up this new Select Committee—with no rules, no deadline, and an unlimited budget—and he set it loose on Secretary Clinton because she is running for president.

The Republicans, Cummings said, “are squandering millions of taxpayer dollars on this abusive effort to derail Secretary Clinton’s presidential campaign.” And to confirm his point, the congressman recalled the admissions of partisan intent and manipulation by Republican majority leader Kevin McCarthy, Republican Congressman Richard Hanna, and the conservative Republican investigator for the committee who “charged that he was fired in part for not going along with these plans to ‘hyper focus on Hillary Clinton.’”

“These stark admissions reflect exactly what we have seen inside the Select Committee for the past year,” said Cummings.

Just look at the facts: Since January, Republicans have canceled every single hearing on our schedule for the entire year—except for this one with Secretary Clinton.

They also canceled numerous interviews that they had planned with Defense Department and CIA officials.

Instead of doing what they said they were going to do, Republicans zeroed in on Secretary Clinton, her speechwriters, her IT staffers, and her campaign officials. This is what Republicans did—not Democrats.

When Speaker Boehner established this Select Committee, he justified it by arguing that it would be “cross-jurisdictional.” I assumed he meant we would focus on more than just Secretary Clinton and the State Department.

But Madam Secretary, you are sitting here by yourself. The secretary of defense is not on your left, and the director of the CIA is not on your right. That’s because Republicans abandoned their own plans to question those top officials. So instead of being “cross-jurisdictional,” Republicans just crossed them off the list.

Last weekend, the chairman told his Republican colleagues to “shut up” and stop talking about the Select Committee.

What I want to know is this—why tell Republicans to shut up when they are telling the truth, but not when they are attacking Secretary Clinton with reckless accusations that are demonstrably false?

Cummings returned to these themes again and again through the 11-hour hearing. At times, he clashed with Gowdy.

He defended Clinton. He defended Ambassador Thomas Pickering’s inquiry into the State Department’s response to the Benghazi tragedy.

Cummings spoke with lawyerly precision and moral fury—earning a rare burst of applause when he said to Clinton: “Do we want to badger you over and over again until you get tired, until we do get the gotcha moment that he’s talking about? We’re better than that. We are so much better. We’re a better country. We’re better than using taxpayer dollars to try to destroy a campaign. That’s not what America is all about!”

Even as he battled the beast of hyper-partisanship, Cummings never lost sight of a basic, and essential, premise.

“It is time,” the congressman said, “for Republicans to end this taxpayer-funded fishing expedition.”

Hillary Clinton could not say that to the committee.

But a distinguished and determined congressman could. And did.

We cannot back down

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Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

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