Take Me to Church: The Straight Dope House Republicans Need to Take Down the Deep State With Church Committee 2.0
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It has been a long and painful process, but both Republican lawmakers and their voting base have finally come to a belated realization: the intelligence apparatus that concocted Russiagate, sabotaged an entire presidency, suppressed the Hunter Biden scandal, and converted Twitter into its domestic censorship machine might not be friendly to their interests.
And so, a mantra for the new Republican Congress is making the rounds: Take Me to Church…
… the Church Committee, that is.
One of the key concessions extracted by anti-Kevin McCarthy Republicans before they agreed to elect him House speaker was the creation of a new Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. The plan, for now, is that Freedom Caucus member Rep. Jim Jordan will head the subcommittee. And the explicit agenda is for this committee to serve as a spiritual successor to the Church Committee of almost half a century ago:
U.S. Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, the GOP chairman of the House Rules Committee, said the subcommittee will be modeled on the U.S. Senate’s 1970s Church Committee that investigated abuses by U.S. intelligence agencies. He said it will probe “the radical left weaponization of the federal government in recent years.” Texas Republican Chip Roy said it will target “weaponization of government against the American people” and be headed by Jordan.
Jordan, who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, has introduced a resolution to create the subcommittee that’s scheduled for a vote this week. It says the subcommittee’s members will include him and the top Judiciary Committee Democrat, New York’s Jerrold Nadler, and no more than 13 other members, with five appointed by Democrats.
Its investigative topics will include examining “how executive branch agencies collect, compile, analyze, use, or disseminate information about citizens of the United States, including any unconstitutional, illegal, or unethical activities committed against citizens of the United States,” the resolution states.
[Cleveland Plain Dealer]
The new committee is an idea that gained momentum over the second half of 2022. Steve Bannon and Revolver News’ Darren Beattie have been calling for a Church-style Committee for over a year now.
In a recent conversation with Revolver News’ Darren Beattie, President Trump went on the record supporting such a Church-style committee:
The idea quickly took root in the wider public discourse, fueled by the steady release of the Twitter Files. McCarthy himself endorsed the idea just before Christmas, as did venture capitalist and Elon Musk associate David Sacks, whose endorsement was in turn endorsed by Musk himself.
We welcome all of this, and are very happy to see Jordan’s new committee take shape. But a Church Committee redux, by itself, is not enough to fix what ails the decaying American republic of today.
It’s understandable why the Church Committee is generating fond reflections nearly a half century later. The yearlong investigation, which at its peak employed more than 150 staffers, was the first, largest, and most substantive Congressional investigation of America’s intelligence apparatus, covering the thirty years where that apparatus ran wild following World War II. The committee’s work produced thousands of pages of collected evidence, testimony, and case studies (much of which remains classified to this day), and culminated in a six-volume final report totaling roughly 2500 pages. The second volume of that report, covering domestic surveillance within the United States, included this damning summary:
https://www.revolver.news/2023/01/church-committee-house-republicans-and-the-deep-state/