Former President Trump may be out of office, but he isn’t far from mind. The House voted on Wednesday to create a select committee to investigate the events of Jan. 6 as some GOP lawmakers joined the former president to tour the U.S.-Mexico border. The House voted 222-190 to establish a select committee to probe the events before and during the Capitol attack. House Democrats were joined by only two House Republicans — Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (Ill.). — to launch what is expected to be a partisan battle over the facts on Jan. 6, and the aftermath (The Hill). Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) decision to move ahead with the select committee comes after a failed attempt to win enough GOP support to establish an independent bipartisan commission to investigate events on a day when five people died. Last month, 35 House Republicans and seven GOP senators threw their weight behind a potential commission. Most conservatives said they were looking “forward,” arguing an investigation was unnecessary. “We have a duty to the Constitution and to the American people to find the truth of Jan. 6, and to ensure that such an assault on our democracy can never happen again,” Pelosi countered. As The Hill’s Cristina Marcos writes, the select panel will be made up of eight members selected by Pelosi and five chosen by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). The commission idea, which Republicans nixed last month, would have given the two sides an equal number of members and co-equal subpoena power. The select panel does not have a deadline, meaning it could spill into next year, bringing the findings closer to next year’s midterm elections. McCarthy’s choice of colleagues to serve on the committee will be closely watched. The GOP leader told Bloomberg News that he has not decided that yet but indicated it might not matter. “It's all partisan, you can see that,” he said. The Washington Post: House votes to create select committee for investigating Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. © Getty Images Notably, 19 House Republicans were absent from Wednesday’s vote. Most were accompanying Trump and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) to the southern border. “We have a sick country in many ways. It's sick in elections, and it's sick in the border. And if you don't have good elections, and if you don't have a strong border, you don't have a country,” Trump said during a roundtable event with Texas state leaders and law enforcement officials. The former president’s photo op also took place days after Vice President Harris made her long-awaited visit to the region. She visited El Paso, Texas, last week, a move that reportedly blindsided her staff and created confusion in her office (Politico). Trump has yet to announce his 2024 intentions, but his focus on immigration and bemoaning of the state of affairs at the border represents a return to his 2016 playbook, which helped vault him to his position of power within the party, The Hill’s Scott Wong writes. Any public spotlight on immigration during the Biden administration is welcomed by most Republicans. They consider issues popular with Trump’s base essential to their quest to retake the House and Senate next year. The Hill: “I want to cry”: House Republicans take emotional trip to the border. Politico: Republicans go all-in on immigration as a political weapon. The Hill: Texas Democrats representing border districts slam Trump visit. Tim Alberta, The Atlantic: A Michigan Republican spent eight months searching for evidence of election fraud, but all he found was lies. Trump’s efforts to regain public attention are not all a plus. The Manhattan district attorney’s office, which collaborated near the end of a two-year investigation with the New York attorney general’s office, on Wednesday night charged the Trump Organization, including chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg, a longtime company executive, with tax-related crimes. Trump was not personally charged (NBC News). The details were sealed Wednesday night, but will be unveiled today ahead of an afternoon arraignment at a state court in Manhattan (The Associated Press). The charges are expected to involve alleged tax violations related to benefits the company gave to top executives, possibly including use of apartments, cars and school tuition, people familiar with the case said. Trump appeared Wednesday night with Fox News’s Sean Hannity to rail at Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) (“he can no longer do the job”), and Democratic leaders in Congress. He also teased the audience that he’s made up his mind about running for president in 2024. He did not detail his decision, which Hannity played up as likely another run (Fox News). Infrastructure update: House Democrats are warming to a new infrastructure strategy, reports The Hill’s Mike Lillis and Bloomberg News). … Senate Republicans are coalescing against one of the main pay-fors in the bipartisan infrastructure agreement: $40 billion to allow the Internal Revenue Service to collect $100 billion more in taxes (Axios). Final salute: Al Eisele, founding editor of The Hill, dies at 85. © Getty Images |
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