Republicans on House Ethics reject for now releasing report on Matt
Gaetz
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[November 21, 2024]
By LISA MASCARO, STEPHEN GROVES and FARNOUSH AMIRI
WASHINGTON (AP) — House Ethics Committee Republicans voted Wednesday
against releasing the panel’s long-running investigation into
President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney general, former Rep.
Matt Gaetz, the top Democrat on the panel said.
The outcome, however, is only a temporary reprieve for Gaetz, who faces
allegations of sexual misconduct, as he works to personally secure his
embattled nomination to be the nation's top law enforcement official.
The House panel expects to meet again Dec. 5 to reconsider releasing its
findings.
"There was no consensus on this issue," said Rep. Susan Wild of
Pennsylvania, the panel's ranking Democrat, who said the vote fell along
party lines on the evenly split committee.
The standoff comes as Trump and Gaetz are digging in for a potentially
lengthy, brutal confirmation fight ahead. Gaetz met privately for hours
Wednesday with Republican senators who have heard questions about the
allegations and will be considering their votes on his nomination.
Trump has in Gaetz a valued ally who is bringing wide-ranging proposals
to rid the Department of Justice of those perceived to have “weaponized”
their work against the president-elect, his allies and conservatives in
general.
At least one Republican senator decried the scrutiny as a “lynch mob”
forming against Gaetz.
“I’m not going to legitimize the process to destroy the man because
people don’t like his politics,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., as he
left the private senators’ meeting.
“He deserves a chance to make his argument why he should be attorney
general,” Graham said. “No rubber stamp, no lynch mob.”
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who is supportive of Gaetz’s nomination,
emerged saying: “If you have concerns, that’s fine. But don’t make up
your mind yet. Let the guy testify first.”
Gaetz has long denied the mounting allegations against him.
The House ethics panel, however, is not finished with its work.
Wild said the committee voted at a lengthy closed-door meeting, and no
Republican joined Democrats who wanted to release the report. A vote to
release just the exhibits underlying the report also failed along party
lines, according to a person granted anonymity to discuss the private
session.
However, the House committee did vote to complete the report, which
passed with some Republican support, the person said.
Wild said she was compelled to speak up after the panel’s Republican
chairman, Rep. Michael Guest of Mississippi, characterized what had
transpired at its session. He had said there was no agreement reached on
the matter.
As Gaetz mounts his campaign for confirmation, Trump himself told
senators that he hoped "to get Matt across the finish line,” said Sen.
Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., who was with the president-elect and others for a
SpaceX rocket launch Tuesday with billionaire Elon Musk in Texas.
Vice President-elect JD Vance, an Ohio senator, was shepherding Gaetz
through the Senate talks, largely with members of the Judiciary
Committee that will be the first stop in confirmation proceedings. The
meeting with Senate allies was largely a strategy session where he
emphasized the need to get a hearing where he could lay out his and
Trump’s vision for the Justice Department.
It follows a meeting Gaetz had at the start of the week with the
conservative House Freedom Caucus, whose members have expressed
enthusiasm for his approach to wholesale changes, which have instilled a
climate of anxiety and dismay at the department.
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President-elect Donald Trump's nominee to be attorney general,
former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., closes a door to a private meeting
with Vice President-elect JD Vance and Republican Senate Judiciary
Committee members, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 20,
2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Vance reminded the GOP senators that Trump's presidential victory had
coattails that boosted their ranks to the majority. “He deserves a
Cabinet that is loyal to the agenda he was elected to implement,” the
outgoing Ohio senator posted on social media.
At the same time, attorneys involved in a civil case brought by a Gaetz
associate were notified this week that an unauthorized person accessed a
file shared between lawyers that included unredacted depositions in a
federal probe from a woman who has said Gaetz had sex with her when she
was 17, and a second woman who says she saw the encounter, according to
attorney Joel Leppard.
The Senate Judiciary Committee's Democrats sent a letter Wednesday
asking FBI Director Christopher Wray to provide to the panel “the
complete evidentiary file," including the forms memorializing interviews
”in the closed investigation of former Congressman Matt Gaetz’s alleged
sex trafficking of minors."
Gaetz has said the department’s investigation into sex trafficking
allegations involving underage girls, separate from the House
committee's probe, had ended with no federal charges against him.
“The grave public allegations against Mr. Gaetz speak directly to his
fitness to serve as the chief law enforcement officer for the federal
government,” wrote Judiciary Chairman Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and
others on the panel.
While House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has said the committee should
not release the report because Gaetz swiftly resigned his congressional
seat after Trump announced the nomination, several GOP senators have
indicated they want all information before having to make a decision on
how they would vote.
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who also met with Gaetz, said of the committee's
report, “We didn’t get into a lot of detail as to what he expects to be
in there, but he expressed confidence that what is before the committee
are a series of false accusations.”
Gaetz emerged at congressional oversight hearings as he railed against
what conservatives claim is favoritism within the Justice Department,
which indicted Trump over alleged mishandling of classified documents
after he left office and for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election
before the Jan. 6, 2021, attack at the Capitol.
But the president-elect's pick has been among his most surprising and
provocative.
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., a Trump ally, said she had a great
meeting with Gaetz and looked forward to “a speedy confirmation for our
next attorney general.” She wrote on social media that Trump’s Cabinet
”is going to shake up the D.C. swamp, and we look forward to moving his
nominees.”
Cramer still said Gaetz had a “steep climb” to confirmation.
“Donald Trump is understandably, legitimately and authentically
concerned that he has an attorney general that’s willing to do what he
wants him to do," Cramer said. “Matt Gaetz is definitely the guy that
will not hold on any punches. ”
As soon as the new Congress convenes Jan. 3, 2025, when Republicans take
majority control, senators are expected to begin holding hearings on
Trump’s nominees, with voting possible on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20.
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Associated Press writer Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.
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