Charles Krauthammer: House GOP is hopeless at oversight hearings
House Republicans don’t quite get that they are hopeless at oversight hearings. They keep losing – and now the chairman of the House Oversight Committee has just introduced articles of impeachment against IRS Commissioner John Koskinen.
I’m sympathetic to the GOP motive, given how the Obama IRS has consistently obstructed and misled Congress in the tax- exemption scandal. But impeachment is no ordinary move. No agency chief or Cabinet officer has been impeached since 1876. And even proponents admit that there is no chance of Koskinen being removed from office because the Senate will never convict.
Instead, says Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, the purpose is public education – “to demonstrate to the American people” that the IRS “will be held accountable” for violating the public trust.
I’m all for demonstrating malfeasance. But the GOP House has given a five-year display of its inability to successfully demonstrate anything. From Benghazi all the way back to Operation Fast and Furious, its hearings’ impact on public perception has been either zero or negative.
Take the IRS case. The House Oversight Committee, led at the time by Darrell Issa, R-Calif., blew it, allowing the IRS’ Lois Lerner to deliver a statement proclaiming innocence and then claim Fifth Amendment protection from having to answer any questions.
Or consider the recent Planned Parenthood hearings where the Republicans had a very strong hand – videotaped discussions of the buying and selling of body parts of dismembered aborted fetuses. Yet the head of Planned Parenthood ran rings around the committee.
Yet as a PR disaster for the GOP, nothing compares to Benghazi, in which the select committee, armed with truly damning evidence against Hillary Clinton, handed her instead a major victory.
Scattered amid those 11 hours of hearings (which in and of themselves lent Clinton an air of heroism and victimhood) was a powerful indictment of the administration for what happened both before the Benghazi attack (600 requests for more protection, all denied) and after, namely, the fable of a demonstration-gone-bad caused by an offensive video.
Yet the outcome of the hearing is the current conventional wisdom that the committee presented nothing new and never laid a glove on her.
How could the Republicans have blown it so badly? They had in their hands very new information: a just-obtained e-mail from Clinton to her daughter the night of the incident saying that it was an attack by an al-Qaida-like group and, even more damning, a conversation the very next day in which Clinton told the Egyptian prime minister that it “was a planned attack – not a protest.”
This evidence was presented at the hearing, but why not at the very beginning with every camera and microphone running, guaranteeing front-page coverage? To be followed by clip after clip of Clinton, then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice and the president himself blaming the attack on a film and a protest, a fraud that went on for two weeks. That would have changed the entire proceedings.
Instead of highlighting this stunning new evidence, the committee offered endless questions about the e-mails of Sidney Blumenthal, someone the public has never heard of.
In each of these cases, Republicans had the facts and the argument. And yet in every one, they failed. What makes them think that they will fare any better in the next iteration, the impeachment of a minor official in an expiring administration?
Charles Krauthammer is a columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
This story was originally published October 30, 2015 at 5:20 PM with the headline "Charles Krauthammer: House GOP is hopeless at oversight hearings."