Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) spoke with reporters on Capitol Hill last week, offering a brief and vague update on the state of his party’s health care overhaul. The GOP leader said every member of the Senate Republican caucus had met that morning, and they were “operating kind of as a committee of the whole.”
The point of the comment, of course, was to push back against the fact that a Republican “working group” — made up of 13 conservative men, mostly from red states — is principally responsible for crafting their party’s secret health care plan. McConnell wants to give the impression that the process is more collaborative: Senate Republicans, the argument goes, may not be working with the health care industry, subject-matter experts, or Democrats, but they are working with one another.
There is, however, ample evidence to the contrary. A wide variety of GOP senators have complained publicly that they have no idea what the Republican proposal entails. There was a recent slide-show briefing for GOP members, but one senator said the slides were flashed across screens so quickly “that they can hardly be committed to memory.”
But let’s not brush past the significance of McConnell’s other talking point: Senate Republicans, he said, are “operating kind of as a committee of the whole.” It’s a phrase that keeps coming up, as evidenced by this report on Thursday:
Republican Conference Committee Chairman John Thune, R-S.D., said the process of writing a healthcare bill has included all GOP senators rather than only those belonging to healthcare-related committees and thus cannot be considered secretive. “Our members have all been involved,” Thune said. “This has really been a committee of the whole, unlike anything I have done since I have been here.”
And this report from the same day:
Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), a member of the Senate leadership team, defended the process…. Pressed on the lack of committee hearings or input by a reporter, he described the Senate GOP working group as “a committee of the whole.”
And this report from two days earlier:
“This has really been a committee of the whole. This really has provided very fulsome and genuine input from every Republican senator,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) told reporters….
They keep using that phrase, but I don’t think it means what they think it means.









