Freedom
Caucus Chair Mark Meadows tries to blame congressional inaction on the media’s
obsession with Trump/Russia
In
the run-up to Capitol Hill's two-day festival of high-profile congressional
grillings of various intelligence types over President Donald Trump's
controversial Russia-related activities, Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), chairman
of the influential House Freedom Caucus, penned a CNN
Opinion op-ed with
the spittake-worthy headline of "How Russia hysteria paralyzes Congress." And yes,
Meadows really goes there:
[A]verage Americans […] will tell you that they could care less
about the latest Washington cable news drama. Rather, what they care about are
policies that impact their families, their pocket books and their everyday
lives.
Political
media and DC elites often forget that the average American family is struggling
to save for the future -- and in fact almost half couldn't cover an
unforeseen $400 expense. Despite the fact that millions of men and women across
this country are working second and third jobs, they are struggling to feed
their families.
Those Americans -- from Western North Carolina to Ohio to
Pennsylvania to Michigan -- aren't focused on the latest breaking
"news" on the Russia investigation. They care about seeing results
and solutions that help their businesses survive -- and grow. They care about
having access to high quality, affordable health care. They care about lower
taxes that allow them to keep more of their paychecks. They care about the
safety and security of their family.
And, in Washington, we have done an abysmal job of maintaining our
primary focus on those issues. Passing important policy that impacts every day
Americans requires consensus building, marketing our ideas to constituents
through media and building coalitions of support. With the constant focus on
Russia, big important policy items like tax reform have been stalled. […]
The hysterics surrounding Russia merely serve to distract from
accomplishing the priorities of the American people -- and for what, partisan
gain?
While I do appreciate the "we" in that
penultimate paragraph, which at least acknowledges the existence of personal
responsibility, the overall thrust of this exercise is to transform the word and into because. Congress
has done an abysmal job AND there are a lot of media hysterics surrounding
Russia, not BECAUSE.
Media obsession with Trump/Russia has not prevented the GOP-led
Congress from doing the de minimis legislative-branch job of passing a freaking budget. Rachel Maddow's heavy breathing had
nothing whatsoever to do with last month's congressional agreement to increase federal spending. It ain't Russian hookers
slipping the handcuffs on the vast majority of congressmen when it comes to
exercising constitutional responsibility for the waging of war.
Tax reform is stalled largely for the decidedly less sexy reason that Republicans do not yet agree amongst themselves precisely how taxes should be
reformed. And I reckon that when it comes to the most potentially significant
act Congress has taken—the deeply flawed and remarkably unpopular American
Health Care Act, which has Meadows' fingerprints all over it—the
Freedom Caucus chair may soon wish he had been blocked by the distractionistas
in the liberal media.
Not only is Meadows soft-pedaling the agency of politicians who,
after all, have a literal vote when it comes to legislation, he's doing so in a
way that carries the distinct whiff of pre-emptively minimizing in a timely
manner the headline-making acts of congressional oversight this week against a
Republican president. While inserting a make-no-mistake sentence about how "it's critical
that we not gloss over any potential wrongdoing in the Russia
investigation," Meadows nonetheless throws scare-quotes around the latest
"scandal" and breaking "news," which was certainly not his
rhetorical style when vigorously investigating the IRS/Tea Party targeting and all things Benghazi.
Meadows is on firmer ground when he asserts that "media and
political hysterics" can "work in opposition to…getting to truth and
transparency." Lordy is there ever hysteria out there. But in our
two-party, three-branch, four-estate, fundamentally adversarial system, every scandal that rises to
the level of televised hearings is guaranteed to come with generous helpings of
partisan and media spittle. What's more—and this can really hurt the feelings of
some of us who nurture romantic ideas about the pursuit of capital-T Truth—base
partisanship is often a more potent motivation than the Scientific Method when
unearthing politically relevant facts.
That, plus skepticism particularly of executive branch power, is
why I defended the
GOP's often hyperbolic efforts to scrutinize Hillary Clinton's actions involving Benghazi,
and it's why I'd like to see constitutional conservatives hold Trump's feet more firmly to the fire when it comes to his obstructiony behavior. The media can be crying wolf,
Democrats can be ludicrously conspiratorial, Congress can be cowardly, average
Americans can be hurting, AND a president can be guilty of at least some
wrongdoing, all at the same time. It has, after all, happened
before.
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