"I
look forward to continuing my conversations with my House
Republican colleagues as I make the case for why I'm the best
candidate to lead our committee going forward," McHenry said in
a statement, two days after Democrats won control of the House
of Representatives in congressional elections.
If he becomes the ranking Republican on the House Financial
Services Committee, McHenry, now the panel's vice chairman,
would work alongside - and often in opposition to - Democratic
Representative Maxine Waters, who is set to chair the powerful
body starting in January.
Waters is a fierce critic of big banks. She wants to impose
tougher rules on the sector and investigate President Donald
Trump.
Republican Representative Blaine Luetkemeyer, who had emerged as
the front-runner to lead the panel if Republicans maintained
their House majority, backed McHenry's candidacy on Thursday,
calling him "the right man for the job."
Luetkemeyer, a banking industry ally, told Reuters last week
that while he would like the top job on the finance panel, he
would not pursue it if McHenry, also the House Republicans'
deputy whip, sought the post.
"McHenry will serve the Financial Services Committee well,
working to find common ground with the Democratic Chair and
serving as loyal opposition when the need arises," Luetkemeyer
said in a statement.
The committee's current chairman, Republican Jeb Hensarling, is
retiring from Congress.
McHenry said in the statement announcing his candidacy:
"I am fully prepared to fight back against any efforts by
Democrats to use this committee to roll back our successes from
the last two years or use the committee as the launch pad for
endless, partisan investigations."
The North Carolina lawmaker told Reuters last week that if he
sat atop the committee, he would focus on financial innovation,
housing finance reform and financial inclusion.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson; Additional reporting by Pete
Schroeder and Peter Cooney)
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