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A tale of bipartisanship in Congress— No, seriously

  • By Susan Davis/NPR
Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., ranking member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government, speaks during a hearing with IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, Tuesday, April 9, 2019, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., ranking member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government, speaks during a hearing with IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, Tuesday, April 9, 2019, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

(Washington)–Last year, when House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy asked then-Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., to help lead a new committee charged with investigating how to modernize the U.S. House, Graves cynically turned him down.

“I had declined it with the — I guess it’s a sad acceptance, that this was just going to be another failed attempt by Congress to say they’re going to do something that they ultimately don’t do,” Graves said. “And boy, was I pleasantly surprised by the outcome and the work of this committee.”

He relented, and along with Rep. Derek Kilmer, D-Wash., set out with a joint mandate to examine ways to make the House more modern, more efficient, and more bipartisan. Kilmer knew it would not be easy.

“The fact that Congress, according to recent polling, is held in lower regard than head lice, colonoscopies and the band Nickelback is some indication that the public doesn’t hold Congress in high regard,” he said.

Graves and Kilmer spoke to NPR in a joint Zoom interview shortly before Christmas.

The recommendations

After nearly two years, the six Democrats and six Republicans on the Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress put out a final report in October with 97 unanimous recommendations on how to change the House.

A lot of them involve logistics, like how to better schedule committee hearings. Others are more controversial, like bringing back some form of earmark spending; and some might elicit eye rolls, like designating bipartisan space in the Capitol where lawmakers can just hang out.

Graves said the committee’s work was all the more notable because they were able to find broad agreement during these hyper-partisan times. “It all occurred during the longest government shutdown in the history of our country. It occurred during impeachment. It occurred during a pandemic,” he said.

It’s already had some impact. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s 2021 work calendar reflected the committee’s recommendations for a more balanced schedule, and new member orientation last month included a new, bipartisan session on decorum. House Democrats are also seriously considering bringing back a form of earmarks in the new Congress.

Playing nice

Two years studying how Congress works has given both men some perspective — and hope — for the new Congress, in which both chambers will be narrowly divided. “Tighter majorities could produce better results. It’s a forced requirement to have to work together,” Graves said.

Republicans, Graves said, need to negotiate in good faith with President-elect Joe Biden. Something, he acknowledges, his party doesn’t always do. “My hope is that members from my party will embrace that and will look for that as an opportunity to do something that, quite frankly, we didn’t do as well as we could have when Barack Obama was president,” he said.

Kilmer said good faith won’t come easy, especially after over half of House Republicans supported a failed lawsuit to get the Supreme Court to overturn the election results. “That’s not to say that Congress can’t get past that, but it would be dishonest of me to say that that’s not something that people are concerned about,” he said.

Both men readily agree that there’s no House Rules change or law that will suddenly make Congress work better. Kilmer said the hardest thing to change is how members treat each other, and the institution.

“We did something very unusual on this committee, and that is we tried to change norms. Everything we recommended that committees do to encourage more bipartisan collaboration to be more productive, we actually modeled ourselves,” he said. For example, Republicans and Democrats sat intermingled in their committee hearings. In other committees, Republicans and Democrats sit on opposite sides.

The committee was set to expire at the end of this Congress, but Kilmer asked Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to keep it going. She agreed right before Christmas in a statement stating the panel “will continue to champion the best ideas that ensure that the People’s House can carry on its vital work now and for years to come.”

Pelosi has tapped Kilmer to continue to chair the committee. Graves retired this year, so McCarthy will have to appoint someone else, but Graves told NPR he supports the committee continuing on. The work of fixing Congress is never done.

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