On paper, yesterday offered the public an opportunity to watch an important part of the policymaking process. Because the House and Senate passed different versions of the Republican tax plan, a conference committee has been convened to reconcile the bills’ differences and create one final piece of legislation for both chambers to vote on.
The first and only public meeting of the conference committee’s members was held on Capitol Hill yesterday afternoon, which theoretically offered Americans a chance to see a meaningful and deliberative debate about a proposal that will dramatically affect the world’s largest economy.
In practical terms, however, yesterday’s conference committee gathering was a joke: Republicans announced two hours before the meeting began that they’d already finalized the details of the new GOP tax blueprint.
It led Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) to note in his opening remarks, “It’s difficult not to feel like a prop here.”
The Arizona Democrat was, of course, exactly right. This was pointless political theater at its most inane. Committee members got together, ostensibly to begin discussions on a final bill, hours after Republicans said they’d already finished writing the bill in secret and behind closed doors.
And so, for 90 minutes, members bickered for no apparent reason, during which time Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) reminded his Republican colleagues, “This is the United States Congress, not the Duma.”
So why bother? Why have a public meeting to begin drafting legislation that’s already been drafted? Slate‘s Jim Newell explained:
The only purpose of the meeting was to serve as a photo-op for Republicans to argue that the conference committee was conducted under “regular order.” […]









