GOP Strips Rep. Steve King Of Committee Assignments Over White Supremacist Views
Republican leaders have stripped Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) of all of his committee assignments for the current Congress following a new wave of outcry over the lawmaker’s vast history of white supremacist viewpoints and racist rhetoric.
“We will not be seating Steve King on any committees in the 116th Congress,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said Monday after a meeting of the GOP Steering Committee. The decision was unanimous.
King lambasted his removal in a statement released late Monday, saying, “McCarthy’s decision to remove me from committees is a political decision that ignores the truth.”
“Ultimately, I told him ‘You have to do what you have to do and I will do what I have to do,’” King wrote. “I will continue to point out the truth and work with all the vigor that I have to represent 4th District Iowans for at least the next two years.”
As HuffPost has extensively reported, it was clear long before his recent comments that King is a white supremacist.
JUST IN: Rep @SteveKingIA statement after losing his committee assignments --> pic.twitter.com/zDDYi76luE
— Alex Moe (@AlexNBCNews) January 15, 2019
Republicans made the move after a coalition of party leaders denounced King’s long history of white nationalist views. The controversy was reignited last week after King gave an interview to The New York Times in which he asked: “White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive?”
McCarthy told reporters Monday that he was not removing King from the GOP House conference and said voters “have that decision to make” in terms of the lawmaker’s future in the chamber.
“But I think we spoke loud and clear that we will not tolerate this in the Republican Party,” McCarthy said.
House Democrats, who took control of the chamber this month, were pushing for intense sanctions against King, and McCarthy himself came out against the lawmaker, saying King’s language had “no place in America.”
“That is not the America I know, and it’s most definitely not the party of Lincoln,” McCarthy said.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) also denounced King, saying his statements were “unwelcome and unworthy of his elected position.”
“If he doesn’t understand why ‘white supremacy’ is offensive, he should find another line of work,” McConnell told The Washington Post.
Today I denounce the words of Representative Steve King, and I do so invoking the words of another King, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who, if he had been allowed to live, would be celebrating his 90th birthday on tomorrow.
— James E. Clyburn (@WhipClyburn) January 15, 2019
King, who was elected to a ninth term in November, held seats on the House committees on agriculture, the judiciary and small business.
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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.