Queen Liz Cheney continued to cement her image as the Iron Lady of the Republican Party this week, with a bold endorsement of Speaker Nancy Pelosiâs decision to veto two Trump alliesâReps. Jim Jordan and Jim Banksâfrom the Jan. 6 select committee.
Pelosi objected to these picks by Minority âLeaderâ Kevin McCarthy because, as Cheney explained, Jordan âmay well be a material witness to events that led to that dayâthat led to January 6th,â and Banks âdisqualified himself by his comments in particular over the last 24 hours demonstrating that he is not taking this seriously.â
In so doing, Cheney preserved the seriousness and credibility of the committee. To borrow a phrase from Rush Limbaugh, Cheney is equal time.
This is a testament to the power of one individualâs integrity-based decisions. Cheney, by her very existence as a Republican, makes this select committee bipartisanâand not solely in the âfig leafâ manner that McCarthy, whoâs determined to cut off any real look at the role Republican elected officials, up to the commander in chief himself, played in the events of that disgraceful dayâwants you to believe.
In the case of an investigation, there are two reasons for bipartisanship. The first is legitimacy. Ideally, you want everyone to feel represented so that there is buy-in. The second reason is that, as the cliché goes, diversity makes us stronger. This is the same reason why any leader should listen to a variety of viewpoints before making a decision.
However, itâs important to distinguish between hearing different perspectives and entertaining conspiracy theories. For example, letâs take the current question over the Afghanistan withdrawal. Thereâs one argument (Cheneyâs) that keeping a residual force is a small price to pay for preventing the Taliban from taking over. The opposing argument is that 20 years is too long for any war to drag on. A leader (Biden) might want to table his biases and fully explore both arguments before making a final decision. What is not worthy of contemplating, though, is the notion that we should have never invaded Afghanistan because 9-11 was an inside job.
In applying this analogy to Jan. 6, Cheney represents one legitimate political worldview and Democrats represent the other. If Pelosi should name Rep. Adam Kinzingerâa Republican, Air Force veteran, and member of the Air National Guardâto the select committee, as she is reportedly considering doing, she would be reinforcing this function and adding an additional check on Democrats who might be tempted to exploit the situation for their own political agenda. (And if you think Dick Cheneyâs daughter is some sort of RINO now, that probably says a lot more about you than it does about her.)
Conversely, Jim Jordan, who sought to undermine the legitimacy of the 2020 election) personifies the âtrutherâ category of the analogy, which is to say that he doesnât so much bring different opinions as he does different facts.
House Republicans are predictably outraged at Cheney, who called B.S. on the game they were playing and single-handedly exposed and undermined their argument. It is increasingly rare to see someone take a stand like this, and I canât help thinking it is brave and bold and romantic and rebelliousâespecially for someone who was once considered conservative royalty, but was recently kicked to the curb for failing to walk the party line.
Speaking of walking the line, Iâm reminded of a famous full-page ad in Billboard magazine with a picture of Johnny Cash flipping the bird and the words, âAmerican Recordings and Johnny Cash would like to acknowledge the Nashville music establishment and country radio for your support.â The photo was taken in 1969 at Californiaâs San Quentin prison, but resurfaced in the late 1990s after country radio had shunned Cash and heâd hooked up with producer Rick Rubin for what turned out to be a late career renaissance.
Todayâs Republican Party is like what country radio had become: lame, hackneyed, superficial, inauthentic, lacking any historical appreciation for the people who laid the foundation for it yet stubbornly and snobbishly parochial and hostile to independent thought.
If Cheney were to take out a full-page ad in Roll Call today, she might acknowledge Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and the Republican establishment and thank them for their support. When it comes to the Republican establishment more concerned with pleasing Trump than with any of its alleged principles, she has gone rogue.
The truth is that Cheney is doing exactly what you would want a congressperson whose judgment is that the attack on Jan. 6 âwas the worst attack on this Capitol since 1814â and âan attack on our Constitutionâ to do. She believes there âmust be an investigation that is nonpartisan, that is sober, that is serious, that gets to the facts wherever they may lead.â This strikes me as an entirely reasonable stand to take. And though todayâs Republicans would deny it, future Republicans may reflect on this moment and find that there was at least one courageous member of their party worth (retroactively) celebrating.
According to no less an authority on conservative governance than Edmund Burke, âYour representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.â
Liz Cheney isnât sacrificing anything to your opinion.