House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., is vowing to block three Democrats from key House committees as retribution for Democrats stripping two extremist far-right lawmakers of their committee assignments in the last Congress.
But McCarthy’s refusal to seat the Democrats — Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, and Eric Swalwell and Adam Schiff of California — on powerful committees has a high chance of blowing up in his face.
In joint news conference Wednesday with Omar and Schiff, Swalwell warned of the consequences posed by McCarthy’s smear campaign.
“The cost is not only removing us from the committee,” Swalwell said, going on to say that “the costs are the death threats that Ms. Omar, myself and Mr. Schiff keep getting because Mr. McCarthy continues to aim and project these smears against us.”
Swalwell mentioned such threats on an episode of “Deadline: White House” last week.
Omar has talked about the value she’s brought to the House Foreign Affairs Committee, given that she’s the only African-born lawmaker on the panel. But I don’t think enough attention is being paid to what it may mean for such a panel to lose her voice.
“As a child who survived war, [and] lived in a refugee camp, I would have never imagined that I would one day have the opportunity to serve on a subcommittee on Africa, global health and human rights,” she said Wednesday, touting her expertise. “Kevin McCarthy’s purely partisan move to strip us from our committee is not only a political stunt, but also a blow to the integrity of our democratic institution and threat to our national security.”
She’s right. (For background, check out this post I wrote last month on the importance of the Biden White House’s recent summit for African leaders.)
Essentially, African leaders want the U.S. to be less patriarchal toward African countries. And if they don’t see change in the relationship, they’re willing to take their business — which the U.S. needs to propel our aspirations of a thriving, high-tech economy — to our global competitors, China and Russia.
U.S. officials are worried about what that would mean, a point underscored by the fact that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield are both in Africa this week touting U.S.-Africa relations.








