Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC) has been tapped by Republican leaders to head up the House’s select committee on Benghazi. Gowdy took office in the GOP wave of 2010 after first defeating then-Rep. Bob Inglis (R-SC) in a primary. He quickly made a name for himself in the House Oversight Committee, where he aggressively questioned witnesses brought in to provide testimony on the Sept. 11, 2012 attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens.
Here are a few things to know about the man carrying the party standard on all things Benghazi.
1. He’s a prosecutor. Almost every profile of Gowdy begins by noting his work as a federal prosecutor and state district attorney, and Gowdy himself loves to speak in the language of the courtroom. In an appearance Wednesday on msnbc’s Morning Joe, Gowdy used a legal analogy to answer a question about whether his investigation might run into 2016, when Hillary Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time of the Benghazi attack, could be running for president.
“It would be shame on us if we intentionally dragged this out for political expediency,” Gowdy said. “On the other hand, if an administration is slow-walking document production, I can’t end a trial simply because the defense won’t cooperate.”
That answer rubbed some critics the wrong way, including The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank, who noted that Gowdy’s purported role was supposed to investigate the attacks to see if any wrongdoing was committed, not hold a “trial” of the White House. But Gowdy uses the trial metaphor often to emphasize his commitment to what he promises will be rigorous look at any evidence related to the attacks.
2. He’s popular on the right. Gowdy is almost universally respected among conservative politicians and commentators. Announcing Gowdy’s new role, Speaker John Boehner called him “as dogged, focused, and serious-minded as they come.”
His theatrical performances in hearings and public events have helped make him a rising star — one video of him at a press conference last year went viral and garnered more than 2 million views on YouTube.
“I assume he’ll be a Supreme Court justice before he’s 65 or so,” fellow South Carolinian Sen. Tim Scott told National Review.
3. … less so with Democrats. The White House and Democratic lawmakers are not happy with Boehner’s decision to create a select committee, arguing it’s an unnecessary partisan move unlikely to produce any new information after more than a year of previous investigations across multiple House and Senate committees. House Democrats are debating whether to boycott it.
Most of their criticism has been levied against GOP leaders’ decision to create the committee itself, not Gowdy personally. Among liberal commentators, however, Gowdy has a reputation for playing to the base with made-for-TV antics and over-promising evidence of White House wrongdoing without providing backup.









