



⪠In just two weeks, Republicans will assume control the U.S. House of Representatives. Once the new session begins, theyâll be able to conduct important oversight activities on the Biden Administration which are badly needed after two years of unified Democrat run government. And yet, even before the Republicans get the gavel, they are about to give up their leverage to hold the Biden Administration accountable… Â
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Why? because at least 10 big government Republicans are likely to join Democrats to approve & pass the massive $1.7 trillion omnibus spending bill in Congress this week. Doing so would directly undermine one of the GOPâs campaign promises. When House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. rolled out the âCommitment to Americaâ plan in September, he made government accountability a core pillar of the plan.Â
Republicans promised ârigorous oversight to rein in government abuse of power and corruption, provide real transparency, and require the White House to answer for its incompetence at home and abroad.âÂ
McCarthy boasted in September: âOn that very first day that weâre sworn in, youâll see that it all changes. Because on our very first bill, weâre going to repeal 87,000 IRS agents. Our job is to work for you, not go after you.âÂ
However, before they even have an opportunity to defund the IRS, Republicans will be handing President Joe Biden a huge Christmas present: $1.7 trillion to continue funding the Federal Government through next September. Included in the omnibus spending bill will be the money for the very same weaponized IRS Republicans promised to put a leash on.Â
Withholding money from Bidenâs corrupt agencies is a good place for the GOP to startâparticularly if those agencies are uncooperative or not forthcoming with information in the New Year.Â
âThe primary method that Congress can use to hold federal agencies accountable is via appropriations,â says Paul Winfree, former budget policy director for President Donald Trump and a distinguished fellow at The Heritage Foundation. âThey should not be appropriating funding for anything until theyâve figured out just how to use their oversight powers.âÂ
Giving up that power now is pure negligence because would insulate the Biden Administration from oversight for the entire next year. Think about the consequences: From now until the fiscal year ends on September 30, 2023, Republicans would be completely powerless to carry out their oversight agenda.Â
This is precisely what Republicans complained about during the Democratsâ control of Congress during Bidenâs presidency. âOver the last two years of Democratsâ one-party rule in Washington, House Democrats have not lifted a finger to engage in oversight and accountability of the Biden Administrationâs actions and abuses of power,â McCarthy said December 6 when rolling out the GOPâs oversight agenda. âThe American people responded this fall by electing a Republican majority in the House of Representatives to stand up for their interests.âÂ
However, McCarthy wonât be able to do much of anything if heâs not holding the purse strings.Â
So what do Senate Republicans say about this malfeasance? After all, to overcome a Senate filibuster, Democrats need at least 10 of their Republican colleagues to support the $1.7 trillion spending measure. In other words, nothing will pass without Republicansâ support in the Senate. Â
Not surprisingly, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. has already signaled his support for the $1.7 trillion spending bill, stating last week, âIf a truly bipartisan full-year bill without poison pills is ready for final Senate passage by late next week, then Iâll support it.âÂ
And then thereâs retiring Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., a former Democrat who never met a spending bill he didnât like. Shelby believes heâs doing House Republicans âa favorâ by passing the bill now. âIf weâre successful, weâll have probably done them a favor,â Shelby told Politico. âThere probably wonât be much thanks for it.âÂ
There shouldnât be any thanks for McConnell, Shelby, and the other big-government Senate Republicans. With friends like them, who needs an opposition party? They are handicapping their House Republican counterparts just weeks after voters put the GOP in power with a promise to hold Biden accountable. Theyâre also undermining the will of voters.Â
The House GOP oversight agenda is ambitiousâand right on target. It includes an investigation of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkasâ failures leading to the border crisis, the governmentâs collusion with Big Tech to censor speech, the origins of COVID-19, Hunter Bidenâs corrupt business dealings, the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, politicization of the FBI, the administrationâs promotion of critical race theory, and many others. Â
By passing the $1.7 trillion spending bill, Republicans would sacrifice their political leverage on all those investigations and more by giving Biden and Democrats exactly what they wantâmoney to continue on unaffected for another year.Â
Thereâs no reason to rubber-stamp this spending bill now. If just 41 of the 50 Senate Republicans say no, they can ensure their House counterparts have all the tools they need to conduct the much-needed oversight and hold the Biden Administration accountable. âŞ
























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âśď¸ 10 Minutes 7 Seconds âď¸ Gary Brown
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