A Partisan Skirmish Solving Zero

Terry Schwadron
4 min readMar 20, 2021

Terry H. Schwadron

March 20, 2021

There was another skirmish on the floors of Congress this week that made no sense other than the endless outpouring of partisanship.

This time it was a vote forced by Republican Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., to drop Rep. Eric Swalwell, a Democrat from California, from the House Intelligence Committee over allegations that a Chinese spy had raised funds for his congressional campaign — in 2015. The measure lost, with all Democrats and Republicans voting on party lines.

It’s not a vote that would change anything — Speaker Nancy Pelosi would appoint a potential replacement — or would fix any of the myriad problems facing this country, or even that would be a timely expression of justice. Apart from the idea that it was a futile effort if you are the minority party, it was simply a partisan slap that follows the pattern of knocking the other guy.

But in this case, the underlying thought — that a foreign power is trying to have influence on choosing our leadership — struck as particularly galling, since we also had that declassified national security assessment that Russia, and to a lesser degree, Iran, had a huge campaign underway to use U.S. legislators and members of the Donald Trump campaign team to funnel disinformation to the American public.

Those figures include Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., who openly talked loudly about information fed him by an identified Russian agent Andrei Derkach, a Ukrainian lawmaker, and Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., the ranking minority Intelligence Committee member, for work to spread disinformation about then candidate Joe Biden and family. Both Johnson, who also has repeatedly offered his racist defense of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and Nunes, who has opposed Biden’s certification as president, remain active in their public damnations on behalf of Trump.

These people have drawn no response from McCarthy.

I’m not big on “whataboutism” as tit-for-tat partisan is termed, but the coincidental timing here seems unusually gross.

The Swalwell Case

McCarthy sponsored his resolution to oust Swalwell over the fact that he has not denied “public reporting that a suspected Chinese intelligence operative helped raise money” for his campaign and helped interns seek potential positions in his congressional office. Since the fall, McCarthy has targeted Swalwell, one of the Trump impeachment managers, after Axios published information about Swalwell’s relationship six years ago with suspected Chinese operative known as Fang Fang, or Christine Fang.

According to the story, Swalwell was among several California politicians reportedly pursued by Fang, who did fund-raising work for his campaign and was photographed alongside Swalwell at a political function and reports that they had dated. When the FBI reported its suspicions in 2015, Swalwell cut off contact. House leaders were also told in 2015, and Swalwell was allowed to serve on the Intelligence Committee. There was another review with McCarthy and Pelosi last year, with opposing views from the two.

McCarthy charged that based on what has been publicly reported, Swalwell “cannot get a security clearance in the private sector” — and thus had no business being on the intelligence panel.

“Only in Congress could he get appointed to learn all the secrets of America — that’s wrong,” McCarthy told reporters. “If you can’t meet that bar, you shouldn’t be able to meet a bar to serve on the intel committee.” McCarthy tweeted out a picture of the form upon which individuals are required to disclose relationships with foreign nationals.

Hmm. Then what are we to make of Johnson and Nunes, their staff members, and non-congressional figures like Michael Flynn, who served as national security adviser despite foreign entanglements, Paul Manaford, Trump campaign chair despite his foreign contacts, among others, including Jared Kushner for not always reporting their contacts with foreigners.

Republican Outliers

Naturally, Swalwell and Democratic defenders noted that McCarthy failed to mention that Swalwell changed his behavior after the FBI alert to him — unlike Johnson, Nunes and the others.

Of course, all this may be in response to the vote by Democrats and 11 Republicans last month to remove Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., from two committees for her extremist QAnon ideologies and threats to other members of Congress. A new effort was introduced yesterday to oust her altogether.

McCarthy wrote on Twitter that “Every Democrat is now on the record. They chose politics over national security.”

Well, yeah, as Republicans have been doing as well. And as these guys seem to do on every question, real or not.

A dozen Republicans voted this week to oppose honoring police from the Capitol and the city for defending the Capitol on Jan. 6 because the resolution contained the work “insurrection,” to which they objected. Then, yesterday, 172 Republicans voted against renewing the so-called defense against violence to women act — it passed the House after elapsing two years ago — finding the bill unneeded even in the week following shooting of eight women massage parlor workers in Georgia. The act did have an anti-gun ownership clause for boyfriends found guilty of domestic violence.

Just what passes as Republican ideology other than saying “No” has become massively unclear.

Even on a straight partisan basis, how does knocking Swalwell off this committee make anyone more likely to vote Republican than Democratic?

My question: What has been gained here? If anything, shouldn’t we be thanking Swalwell for heeding an FBI alert, and asking Johnson and Nunes why they continued to carry water for identified Russian agents despite intelligence warnings? How does anything in all this help with coronavirus, economy, the border, education, environment or anything that we actually care about?

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www.terryschwadron.wordpress.com

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