Davis Wants All Members to Have Access to Impeachment DocumentsU.S. Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.) today joined his colleagues to introduce a resolution to ensure all members of the U.S. House of Representatives have access to impeachment hearing documents. The Let Everyone Access a Copy of the Transcripts Resolution would make a change to House rules to require all closed hearing documents and recordings to be available to all members on the same schedule and basis. Currently, only members who serve on the House Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, and Oversight and Government Reform Committees have access to these documents and hearings. “It’s ridiculous that less than a quarter of the members serving in the U.S. House of Representatives currently have access to impeachment hearing documents and recordings,” said Davis. “I believe the American people deserve to have this entire process done in the open and with rules that follow precedent and allow for due process. At the very least, every member of Congress should have access to hearing documents and other related information.” Davis spoke about increasing transparency of the impeachment inquiry on CSPAN last week. Below are excerpts from his interview. Click here to watch the full interview. When asked if impeachment is keeping the House from passing bipartisan legislation: "It's really interesting. I heard a statistic right before I got here that the Democrat majority in the House has issued more subpoenas than House bills have been signed into law. That's really not what the Democratic majority promised the American people when they gave them control. They said they were going to fix our broken healthcare system. They have yet to put a bill on the floor that is leaving 60 million Americans uninsured or underinsured or having coverage they can't afford to use. We have a bipartisan trade agreement that if Speaker Pelosi put on the floor today, it would pass overwhelmingly in a bipartisan fashion. It's not that the bills aren't out there. Sometimes it's just that Speaker Pelosi didn't put the bills that are bipartisan on the floor. Yesterday was a prime example of that. Why in the world when you have a bill that's co-sponsored by many of my Republican colleagues, and why wouldn't you just mark that bill up in the House Administration Committee and put it on the floor and get a bipartisan win. No, instead they wanted to add other provisions that they knew would result in just a partisan roll call." |

