Monday, November 18, 2024

That upcoming House Ethics meeting, explained

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By Katherine Tully-McManus and Daniella Diaz

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With assists from POLITICO’s Congress team

Rep. Matt Gaetz is seen at the U.S. Capitol.

House Ethics Committee members are set to meet privately Wednesday as debate rages over whether the panel should release its report on its investigation into former Rep. Matt Gaetz. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

WHAT HAPPENS IF ETHICS BLOCKS THE GAETZ REPORT?

House Ethics Committee members are set to meet privately Wednesday — after postponing their Friday meeting — as debate rages over whether the panel should release its report on its investigation into former Rep. Matt Gaetz.

The committee, which operates out of the spotlight, doesn’t disclose its agenda. But Ethics lawmakers are under intense scrutiny as they figure out how to address the report, which lawmakers in both chambers have said they would like to review, particularly given Gaetz’s attorney general nomination.

The committee could vote to adopt or release a report during its closed-door meeting, but if the vote is along party lines — the same number of Democrats and Republicans sit on the committee — a tie means the motion fails and defers to the majority, which is Republican. (Reminder: There is precedent for Ethics releasing reports about former members.)

It’s also possible that they postpone that vote, dragging this out further.

Here’s a breakdown of what could happen if members vote not to release the report, and other ways the investigative findings could see the light of day.

The problem with a leak: Ethics Committee members and staff don’t take the prospect of a leak lightly, if the panel votes to keep the report under wraps.

Part of that is wanting to protect the credibility of the panel, but members also take an oath, pledging: “I will not disclose, to any person or entity outside the Committee on Ethics, any information received in the course of my service with the Committee, except as authorized by the Committee or in accordance with its rules.”

So even if Democrats want this to come out, many don’t want to be responsible for breaking that oath — or the potential consequences, like censure or expulsion at the hands of their colleagues.

A Pentagon Papers strategy? Some lawmakers are privately theorizing that, should the committee block the release of the report, a lawmaker could go to the House or Senate floor and read it into the congressional record rather than leak it to the media.

That’s what happened when The New York Times and The Washington Post were waiting for a Supreme Court decision on whether they could leak the Pentagon Papers — so then-Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) read the papers on the Senate floor on June 29, 1971. He made it through 4,100 pages of the 7,000-page leaked document before submitting the rest into the record. (It resulted in a Supreme Court case, Gravel vs. USA.)

Any member who dares to take this step could face near-immediate consequences, including censure or expulsion. Republicans could quickly bring up a privileged resolution, bypassing Ethics and Rules, to punish whoever comes to the floor with the report.

“Let's say a Democrat chose to go ahead and do that on the floor, the downside would be that it would blow up the Ethics process. Now that may not be the world's biggest loss, because in the House it’s been pretty weak, but you would then simply be saying: ‘We’re no longer gonna abide by the rules, because we don’t believe in the rules,’” said Meredith McGehee, an independent expert in government ethics.

Another possibility: Even if the Ethics panel doesn’t want to make the report public, they can vote to share it with the Senate Judiciary Committee ahead of potential confirmation hearings. Some Republican senators have called to see the report, including Texas Sen. John Cornyn.

McGehee pointed to another option: Instead of handing over the report, House members could make the report available in a secure room where senators could — gulp — venture to the House to read it. That, of course, would cut down on some leak risks associated with distributing copies of the report to the entire Judiciary staff.

Sober warning: Staff-driven leaks have happened before, but typically not in a situation with so much at stake. In addition to losing a job, there are also real concerns of political violence if a staff leaker’s name became public.

— Katherine Tully-McManus and Daniella Diaz

GOOD EVENING! Welcome to Inside Congress, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this Monday, Nov. 18, where Gaetz is gone, but we've never heard his name more in the Capitol hallways.

 

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WHAT TO WATCH IN HOUSE DEM LEADERSHIP ELECTIONS 

House Democrats have their leadership elections starting Tuesday morning. We’re not expecting much drama at the top of the leadership chain, with Reps. Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.), Katherine Clark (Mass.) and Pete Aguilar (Calif.) not facing challenges.

Other top leaders also have no competition. After a rules change, party leadership picks the DCCC head, and current chair Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) is expected to stay if Jeffries asks her to.

Instead, the more hotly contested races are further downballot for positions like the chair of the caucus’ policy and communications arm. Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas), currently the freshman representative to leadership, is challenging Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) in a race that’s raised some eyebrows around the caucus. Crockett griped in a Sunday post on X, before she had even launched her candidacy, “that the media had already been fed information.” Crockett has picked up at least some public support from Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas), a current co-chair of the messaging arm who lost the chair race to Dingell in the last leadership elections.

The battleground leadership representative position, which brings a purple-district voice to the leadership table, also has a competitive race between Reps. Kim Schrier (D-Wash.), Greg Landsman (D-Ohio), and Susie Lee (D-Nev.).

Some of the other competitive races:

  • Freshman representative: Reps.-elect Emily Randall (D-Wash.), Sarah Elfreth (D-Md.) and Luz Rivas (D-Calif.). 
  • Freshman president: Reps.-elect April Delaney (D-Md.) and Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.) 

— Nicholas Wu

 

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DO YOU REMEMBER THE ETHICS ‘TRUCE’?

The Matt Gaetz drama has us thinking about House Ethics Committee history, and a time when the panel was doing less than the bare minimum — the 1990s. Bad behavior and investigations into two speakers prompted an unofficial seven-year truce.

No speaker safe: After ethics inquiries led to the resignation of one Democratic speaker, Jim Wright, and a $300,000 fine against Republican Speaker Newt Gingrich, the House entered an ethics no-man’s-land.

New rules: In 1997, the House approved rules to bar outsiders from filing ethics complaints. New rules limited it only to sitting members of Congress, tightly controlling who could raise issues for the Ethics Committee to investigate.

The rules change led to an unofficial seven-year truce on ethics probes. There were some inquiries, but all were initiated by the panel, not by individual House members, and there was little public acknowledgement — as is required by current committee rules.

But it’s not like everyone behaved: By the early 2000s, tensions rose. Flagrant wrongdoings by members of both parties rose to a fever pitch. Newspapers published investigations. A grand jury in Texas began investigating House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and watchdog groups — cut out under new rules — published their own accusations.

The Ethics panel defended itself, but acknowledged that House members were refraining from filing legitimate complaints for fear of "retaliatory complaints against members of their own party."

Breaking the truce: A lame-duck freshman, Democrat Chris Bell of Texas, broke the truce in 2004, when he accused the House majority leader of ''bribery, extortion, fraud, money laundering and the abuse of power'' in a 187-page complaint.

— Katherine Tully-McManus 

 

REGISTER NOW: Join POLITICO and Capital One for a deep-dive discussion with Acting HUD Secretary Adrianne Todman, Rep. Darin LaHood (R-IL), Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) and other housing experts on how to fix America’s housing crisis and build a foundation for financial prosperity. Register to attend in-person or virtually here.

 
 
HUDDLE HOTDISH

If only this was our view from the POLITICO office.

Find your best senator look-alikes.

So that’s not a no forever, Mitch McConnell? 

Salud Carbjal’s staff wished him a happy birthday. 

Andy Kim stopped by the Umbrella Art Fair at Union Market.

RIP Charlie Palmer Steak.

QUICK LINKS 

House Ethics panel to meet Wednesday as Gaetz question looms, from Andrew Howard, Daniella Diaz and Rachael Bade

New Jersey Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s campaign for governor takes flight, from Matt Friedman

Library of Congress emails hacked by ‘adversary,’ from Maggie More and Julie Tsirkin at NBC News

White House asks Congress for $100B in aid for hurricanes, other disasters, from Jennifer Scholtes

TRANSITIONS 

Sen.-elect Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) is staffing up with his first four hires: Raphael Chavez-Fernandez as chief of staff, Abigail O’Brien as state director, Jacques Petit as comms director and Jose Contreras as director of operations. All are alums of Gallego’s House office, with O’Brien and Petit most recently working for the Harris campaign in Arizona.

 

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TOMORROW IN CONGRESS

The House and Senate are in session.

 

Policy change is coming—be the pro who saw it first. Access POLITICO Pro's Issue Analysis series on what the transition means for agriculture, defense, health care, tech, and more. Strengthen your strategy.

 
 

TUESDAY AROUND THE HILL

Noon Sen. Bernie Sanders will hold a press conference on Tuesday, with Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Peter Welch (D-Vt.), and Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), to discuss the Joint Resolutions of Disapproval to block the sale of certain offensive arms to Israel.

12:30 p.m. Reps. Don Davis (D-N.C.) and Juan Ciscomani (R-Ariz.) will host a press conference on the Veterans Employment Readiness Yield Act. (House Triangle)

TRIVIA

FRIDAY’S ANSWER: This one stumped everyone. Edward White was the first sitting associate justice to be elevated to chief justice.

TODAY’S QUESTION, from Nicholas Wu: This governor had himself appointed to the Senate when Sen. Walter Mondale became vice president. He later lost his bid for reelection.

The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Inside Congress. Send your answers to insidecongress@politico.com.

GET INSIDE CONGRESS emailed to your phone each evening.

 

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