Ex-lawmakers request ethics probes into sitting members of Cong. linked to J6

Source: The Hill | December 17, 2022 | Mychael Schnell

Ex-lawmakers request ethics probes into sitting members of Congress linked to Jan. 6

More than 30 former House lawmakers are calling for ethics investigations into sitting members of Congress “who played a role” in the events on the day of and before the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, arguing that elected officials involved with the riot “must be held accountable.”

In an open letter first shared with The Hill, the group — which includes 36 former House members from both parties — is calling on sitting lawmakers in the lower chamber to “demand that the Office of Congressional Ethics thoroughly investigate” members linked to the Capitol riot. If necessary, the ex-lawmakers write, they also want the House to “exercise its disciplinary functions.”

“As is now clear, January 6th was only one event among many that together constituted an extraordinary campaign to overturn an election,” the letter reads. “The scale and audacity of the campaign is profoundly troubling.”

“Among the most alarming findings is that various members of Congress participated in it,” the former lawmakers added.

The letter, which will be posted on Medium Saturday, does not name specific lawmakers who should be subject to investigation, but it does reference a number of allegations that have been linked to members through media reporting and the probe conducted by the Jan. 6 select committee.

“We now know, for example, that sitting lawmakers corresponded and met with White House officials and allies to plot various prongs of the campaign, including to advocate that the president declare martial law; that states submit false certificates of electoral votes to Congress; that the vice president, in contravention of his constitutional duties, interfere with the counting of electoral votes; and that federal law enforcement authorities be enlisted to interfere with the election; among other startling facts. We also now know that various sitting lawmakers sought presidential pardons,” the letter reads.

At its hearing in June, the Jan. 6 select committee named six House Republican lawmakers who requested pardons or contacted officials regarding pardons after voting to overturn election results in states the day of the riot: Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), Mo Brooks (R-Ala.), Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Additionally, this week, Talking Points Memo published text messages former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows exchanged with members of Congress. In one exchange on Jan. 17, 2021, Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) asked Meadows to urge then-President Trump to impose martial law — spelling it “Marshall Law” — calling such a move “Our LAST HOPE” for “saving our Republic.”

Separately on Jan. 17, Greene texted Meadows with a similar message: The president should call for martial law.

“In our private chat with only Members, several are saying the only way to save our Republic is for Trump to call for Marshall law. I don’t know on those things. I just wanted you to tell him,” Greene texted Meadows, according to CNN.

The network also reported that, on Nov. 6, 2021, Biggs texted Meadows about a “proposal” to encourage Republican state legislators to send alternate slates of electors to Congress.

And, in the committee’s subpoena to Brooks sent in May, Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the chair of the panel, said the group has evidence that Brooks’s staff met with staffers from then-Vice President Mike Pence’s office to relay that Pence did “have authority to unilaterally refuse to count certified electoral votes.”

The former lawmakers said an Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) investigation is necessary to hold sitting lawmakers linked to the riot accountable.

The OCE is an independent watchdog that probes allegations of misconduct against members and other House staffers. When appropriate, the group refers matters to the House Ethics Committee.

“These lawmakers stopped short of storming the Capitol themselves. But they shared a common goal with those who did: to prevent the lawful transfer of power for the first time in the Republic’s history,” the former lawmakers wrote. “As with those who stormed the Capitol, they must be held accountable.”

“We expect that Congress will and should be home to intense and passionate disagreement. But we did not expect that lawmakers who found their party on the losing side of a presidential election would take matters into their own hands,” they added. “Our ability to ensure that such efforts are not repeated rests upon accountability for unlawful and unethical behavior. No one—including members of Congress—is above the law.”

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