Ethics Committee won’t release Gaetz report after multiple rounds of votes: Source
The House Ethics Committee voted Wednesday against releasing its report on Rep. Matt Gaetz after multiple rounds of votes, a source told ABC News, with all Republicans on the committee voting against its release.
Republican Rep. Michael Guest, the committee chairman, told reporters, βThere was not an agreement to release the report,β as he left the meeting.
But Rep. Susan Wild, the top Democrat on the committee, disagreed with Guestβs characterization of what had occurred, saying βThere was no consensus on the issue.β
βThe chairman has since betrayed the process by disclosing our deliberations within moments after walking out of the committee, and he has implied that there was an agreement of the committee not to disclose the report. That is untrue — to the extent that suggests that the committee was in agreement or that we had a consensus on that, that is inaccurate,β Wild said.
Wild said βa vote was takenβ and suggested it was tied, implying no Republicans crossed party lines. There are five Republicans and five Democrats on the committee.
βWe often vote unanimously. That did not happen with this vote. And I do not want the American public or anyone else to think that Mr. Guest’s characterization of what transpired today would be some sort of indication that the committee had unanimity or consensus on this issue not to release the report. That would be an inaccurate portrayal,β she said.
Sources said the committee will complete the report and take it up again in December. Other committee members refused to answer questions.
Meanwhile, Democratic Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois plans to introduce a privileged resolution to try to force the Ethics Committee to release the report.
Under House rules, once the resolution is introduced, the House will have to take it up within two legislative days. GOP leadership will decide when it’s brought up for a vote. Republicans will attempt to block the effort but it’s unclear how this will play out.
The committee spoke with more than a dozen witnesses, issued at least 25 subpoenas and reviewed thousands of pages of documents in its investigation of Gaetz, who resigned from office last week after President-elect Donald Trump chose him as his nominee for attorney general.
The investigation into Gaetz
On April 9, 2021, the secretive panel announced it had initiated a review into allegations that Gaetz βmay have engaged in sexual misconduct and/or illicit drug use, shared inappropriate images or videos on the House floor, misused state identification records, converted campaign funds to personal use, and/or accepted a bribe, improper gratuity, or impermissible gift, in violation of House Rules, laws, or other standards of conduct.β
House Ethics initially deferred its consideration of the matter in response to a request from the Department of Justice, which conducted its own multiple-year sex-trafficking probe into the four-term congressman.
In February 2023, DOJ informed lawyers representing witnesses that it would not bring charges against Gaetz.
Gaetz blamed former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy when the Ethics Committee reauthorized its investigation in May 2023 after the Department of Justice had withdrawn its deferral request. Gaetz then successfully led the charge to oust McCarthy as speaker.
This June, the committee announced it was still investigating whether Gaetz had βengaged in sexual misconduct and illicit drug use, accepted improper gifts, dispensed special privileges and favors to individuals with whom he had a personal relationship, and sought to obstruct government investigations of his conduct.β
But it announced it would take βno further actionβ on the allegations that he may have shared inappropriate images or videos on the House floor, misused state identification records, converted campaign funds to personal use, and/or accepted a bribe or improper gratuity.
The House Ethics Committee had nearly completed the inquiry before Gaetz abruptly resigned last week after Trump announced he had selected Gaetz as his attorney general nominee.
The committee generally drops investigations of House members if they leave office but Republicans and Democrats have argued whether a break in that precedent is necessary for the Senate to perform its constitutional duty to advise and consent to presidential nominations.
While the clearest above-water path for the reportβs release is by agreeing to a majority vote by the Ethics Committee, there is also speculation that any single member could offer a privileged resolution on the House floor to force an up-or-down vote on its disclosure.
What committee leaders have said
Ethics Committee Chairman Michael Guest, R-Miss, has been tight-lipped about the meeting agenda on Wednesday but said he has read the Gaetz report.
Wild told reporters on Monday that the report should be disclosed to the public and said Wednesday that her position had not changed.
βYou either are going to disclose it or you’re not going to disclose it. So, and there’s plenty of precedents in the Ethics Committee to disclose the report even after a member has resigned,β Wild said Monday.
What congressional leaders have said
Johnson has made clear that he believes the committee should not release an investigative report on a former member of Congress.
βMy job is to protect the institution, and I have made very clear that I think itβs an important guardrail for our institution that we not use the House Ethics Committee to investigate and report on persons who are not members of this body,β Johnson told reporters at the Capitol on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, during a press conference on Tuesday, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries answered βYesβ when asked if the report should be released.
Who’s on the committee?
The five Republicans on the committee are: Chairman Guest of Mississippi, David Joyce of Ohio, John Rutherford of Florida, Andrew Garbarino of New York and Michelle Fischbach of Minnesota.
The five Democrats are: Wild of Pennsylvania, Veronica Escobar of Texas, Mark DeSaulnier of California, Deborah Ross of North Carolina and Glenn Ivey of Maryland.
Source: abc news