With no leader, commission overseeing virus relief struggles

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AP Washington
Last Updated : May 17 2020 | 7:30 PM IST

Seven weeks after Congress unleashed more than USD 2 trillion to deal with the coronavirus crisis, an oversight commission intended to keep track of how the money is spent remains without a leader.

Four of the five members of the Congressional Oversight Commission have been appointed, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., have not agreed on a chair, leaving the commission rudderless as the federal government pumps unprecedented sums into the economy.

Without a leader, the panel's remaining members can still do some oversight work, but cannot hire staff or set up office space.

The four members have not met as a group since the economic rescue law was passed by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump in late March.

If the commission is not functioning which it is not then there is no oversight on a huge part of the economic rescue law, said John Coates, a professor of law and economics at Harvard Law School.

So far, it's a non-oversight, oversight commission,? added Kimberly Wehle, a visiting professor at American University Law School. Lawmakers trying to oversee the spending law "are surging down the rapids without a raft,'' she said.

Congress created the panel to watch over $500 billion in lending to distressed industries backed by the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve. The Fed has said the money can be leveraged to offer more than $2 trillion in loans to U.S. companies.

But without a chairman, the panel's activity has been reduced to tweets and letters by individual commissioners and a May 8 statement in which it pledged to publish a required report "soon.

The failure by Pelosi and McConnell to agree on an oversight head is the latest example of a broken Congress, marked by partisanship and polarization.

Even as both sides acknowledge the importance of overseeing the sprawling economic rescue law, lawmakers are immobilized by a larger political fight, with no resolution immediately in sight.

It's disappointing but not surprising" that the oversight panel lacks a leader nearly two months after the emergency law was adopted, said Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight.

We've all seen how Congress operates,'' she added, saying it was difficult to see Pelosi and McConnell agreeing on an appointee in the near term, given their level of mutual distrust.

The dispute between the two leaders far transcends this particular problem,'' Brian said, but oversight should not suffer because these two can't agree.

Representatives for Pelosi and McConnell said they had no update on when the oversight position would be filled, although Pelosi has told reporters she and McConnell have been talking "and hopefully we'll have a decision soon. Meanwhile, they have engaged in a high-profile war of words over a new, $3 trillion rescue law pushed by House Democrats.

McConnell called the bill "an 1,800-page liberal wish list,'' while Pelosi lambasted McConnell and other Republicans who have said they want to hold off on more relief spending.

It's amazing to me how much patience and how much tolerance someone can have for the pain of others, she said.

The House approved the bill on Friday, setting up negotiations with the White House and Senate Republicans that could go on for weeks.

Wehle, who teaches courses on the separation of powers, said congressional dysfunctional goes back decades.

There used to be a Congress that worked across the aisle to get things done,'' she said.

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First Published: May 17 2020 | 7:30 PM IST

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