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If Democrats retake the House, the Maryland congressman will likely become the new chair of the Oversight Committee. Here’s a preview of what to expect.
Elijah Cummings says he doesn’t have a lot of patience, and
he has even less trust.
To him, Donald Trump “is a person [who] calls a lie ‘the truth’
and the truth ‘a lie.’” He thinks the president violates the Constitution’s
emoluments clause daily, and sees an abnormal tolerance for corruption and
misconduct emanating straight out of the Oval Office. And, in the eyes of the
67-year-old Democrat, just as troubling is the notion that Congress has fallen
flat on its constitutional duty to check the administration.
Expect that to change if
Democrats retake the House in November. Then, the Baltimore congressman is set
to become the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee,
giving him subpoena power and the ability to call as many hearings as he wants
on whichever topics he chooses.
In light of everything he’s
learned about Trump—and especially after Senate testimony last week by Supreme
Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, which Cummings saw as dishonest—the congressman
doubts he’ll be able to believe any denial from anyone in the administration,
regardless of whether they’re under oath, he said in an interview for POLITICO’s OffMessage podcast.
“Oh no, no. Uh-uh. No,” Cummings said. “I worry more about getting
documents. If I can get documents, it doesn’t matter.”
Excited by the polls, Democrats
have been fantasizing about all the investigations they’ll launch when they
control Congress, the way they’ll swamp the White House with more requests than
a staff that’s already stretched thin—one likely to see more departures after
November—will be able to handle.
Cummings is prepping
targets—from the security clearances of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and
former national security adviser Michael Flynn, to digging into how former EPA
chief Scott Pruitt was able to keep his job for so long—and the list is getting
longer by the week.
Just last week, he says, he
added to it claims by the Senate Judiciary Committee‘s staff—made without
further detail—that two men had separately come forward to each claim
responsibility for sexually assaulting Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, the woman who
has alleged Kavanaugh assaulted her as a teenager.
“I want to find out,” Cummings
said. “Did [the staff] have someone who came—or two people—who came and
admitted a crime, and what did they do about it? What are their names? Who are
they? I’d like for them to come before us and let us know what they did and
when they did it and how they did it.”
He jokes that watching the
Judiciary Committee hearings is the only time he wishes he had run for Senate,
as he’d considered doing for the seat that his former House colleague Chris Van
Hollen won in 2016.
After a year of health
problems that had him laid up in the hospital for six months after heart
surgery—and still using a walker and a cane to recover from a knee
injury—Cummings says his new sense of mortality has shot through his approach
to the job.
“Let’s cut through the
unnecessary BS and let’s get to the facts—and I do not want anybody wasting my
time. Nor do I want to waste the time of my committee members, or my family
members,” Cummings said. “And I damn sure don’t want to waste my time.”
Cummings is a private
man. Staffers who’ve known him for years don’t know basic details of his
personal life, the result of a clear division he draws between his family time
and government work. He doesn’t do many interviews. He’s been in politics for
35 years, in Congress representing Baltimore since 1996. Most Sundays, he’s in
church instead of working the TV show circuit. He’s a proud member of the
Congressional Black Caucus and has been since he got to Washington, but he’s
deliberately not defined himself as a black leader in
Congress. He’s better known for burrowing down into committee work and gaining
friends in every pocket of the caucus, including a number of Republicans—a fact
that has some people thinking he could wind up as speaker of the House if Nancy
Pelosi stumbles.
Click here for
the full podcast, including what Cummings says he learned from having two
Pentecostal preachers as parents, and why his faith is defined by what he calls
“a recycling god.”
But even if she doesn’t,
if Democrats take the House, Cummings will be one of the three most important
committee chairs going up against the White House, along with California’s Adam
Schiff on Intelligence, managing the Russia probe, and New York’s Jerry Nadler
on Judiciary, trying to thread the needle on a response to those calls for
Trump’s impeachment.
“He will not be bashful.
He will be aggressive,” said Jason Chaffetz, the former Utah GOP congressman
who chaired the Oversight Committee with Cummings as its ranking member. “And
I’ll probably disagree with everything he does.”
Chaffetz pointed out
that Cummings, despite his friendship with President Barack Obama, co-signed
300 letters from the committee to provide oversight of the Obama
administration. But Chaffetz warned that House Democrats may be overestimating
how much they’ll be able to get out of a reluctant White House, and argued that
they would have been better off joining with Republicans to demand intelligence
information that the administration was trying to keep secret.
“If [North Carolina
Rep.] Mark Meadows and [Ohio Rep.] Jim Jordan can’t get documents out of the
White House, I don’t know why Elijah Cummings and the Democrats think they’ll
do any better,” Chaffetz said.
Sit down with Cummings
for a while, and the frustration comes out, punctuated with the occasional
“come on, now!” He’s still annoyed about what happened after he approached
Trump at the post-inauguration luncheon to say they could work together on
lowering prescription drug prices: Trump invited Cummings to the White House,
the two had a good meeting, and then Cummings heard the president publicly
crediting Cummings with saying that Trump would “go down as one of the great
presidents.” (Cummings says his statement was surrounded by a lot of caveats
and “if” statements, none of which Trump has fulfilled).
It’s not just that the president obviously misrepresented him,
Cummings said, and that his takeaway from the experience is, “I have to really
be careful if I ever talk to him or meet with him, I have to have somebody
present, to be a witness.” The bigger frustration is that he hasn’t heard from
the White House for close to a year about the prescription drug prices that
Cummings says are costing people their lives—and which Trump said he cared
about.
He’s particularly offended by
the GOP approach to voting rights. Where are the Republicans willing to revise
the Voting Rights Act, he asks, as the Supreme Court suggested Congress do in
its decision striking down a key section of it in 2014?
He thinks about his mother, who
died in February at age 92, born a sharecropper in South Carolina, just like
his father, and who came to still-segregated Baltimore in the 1940s looking for
something better.
“My mother, on her dying bed,
the last thing she said to me was, ‘Do not let them take away our right to
vote.’ And then she died. Why? Because she had seen the pain that people had
gone through to get the vote, what it meant to see for her,” Cummings said.
He’s a collaborative person. He
makes actual friendships across the aisle. He doesn’t throw flames just for the
sake of it.
Not on this.
“I don’t see how somebody
there—a Republican—can go and say, ‘I’m your friend,’” he said. “You’re not my
friend. How can you be my friend when you won’t even let me control my own
destiny? How can you be my friend?”
Still, Cummings said, he
doesn’t think he’ll have a hard time working the balance between Democrats
who’ll insist that no matter how many investigations he launches that he’s not
doing enough, and Republicans who’ll insist that no matter how tight a grip he
keeps on them, that he’s overreaching.
“I tell my constituents, ‘We
are in a storm. It’s a big storm. It’s called the Trump storm,’” Cummings said.
“‘The question is not whether the storm will end, but ‘Where will you be? What
will you have? Will you be living when that storm ends?’ That’s the question.
So, in the meantime, we’ve got to respect that storm and deal with it.”




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