I generally ignore press releases from various organizations, think tanks, and advocacy groups, but this one stood out for me this week.
Today, the Center for American Progress and more than 100 advocacy groups sent a letter to Republican leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives to deny committee assignments to members who have openly promoted QAnon conspiracy theories and endorsed ideologies rooted in white supremacy. The letter comes after a mob containing many prominent white supremacists and QAnon supporters, incited by President Donald Trump, violently stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overturn the results of a free and fair democratic election.
The letter read in part, “Promoting QAnon and white supremacist, anti-Muslim, and anti-Semitic ideas endangers the legitimacy of our government institutions and incites violence against vulnerable communities. We strongly urge you to demonstrate your disapproval of such ideologies and hold these Members accountable by denying them Committee assignments in the 117th Congress.”
Congress has the authority under the Constitution to expel members, but it’s awfully difficult: it requires a two-thirds majority. It’s happened 20 times in U.S. history, though most of the instances related to members who backed the Confederacy during the Civil War.
Following last week’s attack on the U.S. Capitol, some have raised the specter of expelling some of Congress’ most right-wing members, though it remains difficult to imagine a sufficient number of House GOP members voting to remove one of their own. (That said, if evidence were to emerge of members assisting and/or coordinating with the insurrectionist mob, or if members faced prosecution for crimes related to the attack, the political calculus could change.)
But this need not be a binary choice between expulsion and indifference. The House Republican leadership could give its extremist members the Steve King treatment.
Exactly two years ago today, following a lengthy list of racist incidents, GOP leaders agreed to strip then-Rep. King of his committee assignments. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said his conference simply could not “tolerate” the Iowan’s racism any longer.
In the two years that followed, King could vote on bills once they reached the House floor, but his presence on Capitol Hill was otherwise rendered meaningless. A year and a half later, his constituents brought King’s toxic career to an end with a defeat in a Republican primary.









