Wednesday, June 27, 2012

House Democrats break rank to back Holder contempt as vote looms

A Democrat has joined the ranks of Republicans planning to vote in favor of holding Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt over his refusal to turn over Operation Fast and Furious documents. 

Utah Rep. Jim Matheson circulated a statement announcing he would support the GOP-led vote. 

"Sadly, it seems that it will take holding the attorney general in contempt to communicate that evasiveness is unacceptable," Matheson said

He said the public, Congress and the family of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry - whose murder scene included weapons from the botched anti-gunrunning operation - "deserve answers." 

The announcement would seem to back up Republican Rep. Darrell Issa's claim over the weekend on "Fox News Sunday" that the vote will be "bipartisan." 

Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, is leading the charge on the contempt vote. And it appears that vote is going forward, despite a last-ditch attempt by Obama administration officials on Tuesday to work out a deal. 

A source familiar with those talks told Fox News that the Republicans met with administration officials twice Tuesday -- at the Justice Department and at the White House. The Justice Department showed GOP staff 14 documents on the failed anti-gunrunning operation, totaling about 30 pages. 

Republicans apparently thought the offer was not good enough. 

But the move prompted criticism from the White House. 

"This was a good faith effort to resolve this while still protecting the institutional prerogatives of the Executive Branch, often championed by these same Republicans criticizing us right now," said White House spokesman Eric Schultz. "Unfortunately Republicans have opted for political theater rather than conduct legitimate Congressional oversight." 

The House Rules Committee will tee up a Thursday floor vote on contempt by taking up two related contempt resolutions on Wednesday afternoon. 

Republicans have accused the Justice Department of stonewalling all along, and claim the contempt vote is a last-resort move to extract documents about the operation -- specifically documents from February 2011 and beyond that speak to why the administration might have initially claimed it did not allow guns to "walk" across the U.S.-Mexico border. The administration later retracted that claim. 

Matheson's decision to support contempt could reflect his vulnerable political circumstances. He is the only Democrat from Utah in Congress, and is facing a tough reelection this fall after redistricting in the state.