
Subcommittee to be set up to review schemes
Bob Unruh
WND News Center
The “weaponization” of federal law-enforcement agencies for political purposes, such as the actions by the FBI and the Department of Justice when they colluded with Democrats and fabricated the now-debunked “Russia collusion” claims against President Trump, are going to be investigated by the new Congress.
In that scheme, the FBI used faked evidence in court to obtain permission to spy on the 2016 Trump campaign on the unsubstantiated claims it was colluding with Russia against the Democrat candidate, the two-time loser Hillary Clinton.
In fact, it actually was the Democrats who were using Russian sources to manufacture the claims against Trump.
Now Just the News is reporting that the deal with conservatives that installed Kevin McCarthy as House speaker is creating a special investigative panel to look into that issue as well as another panel to look at the “origins of the COVID-19 virus.”
The report explained, “The two subcommittees — one in the House Judiciary Committee and the other in the House Oversight Committee — are identified in a draft summary document of the deal between McCarthy and the lawmakers obtained by Just the News. It was confirmed to Just the News by multiple sources who are familiar with the deal.”
One will be a “Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government as a select investigative subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary.” The second is a “Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic of the Committee on Oversight and Accountability to investigate, make findings, and provide legislative recommendations on the origins of the Coronavirus pandemic.”
Some lawmakers have been concerned about the improper behaviors found inside the FBI, where during Trump’s first campaign agents and lawyers openly discussed how they would stop Trump from becoming president no matter the vote of Americans. They then expanded their agenda against him after he took office, and those lawmakers already have asked for a committee modeled after the 1970s Church Committee that identified abuses then, too, by the FBI and CIA.
“McCarthy has said that he’s creating this Church Committee that’s going to investigate the FBI and the DOJ and all these things that were going on,” explained Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., “And it is illegal for a person in government to use their position to thwart [speech] for political purposes. And so we’re gonna get to the bottom of that.”
He said people will be required to answer questions from Congress.
The report said the focus of the “weaponization” subcommittee also will be on the FBI’s “targeting of conservatives, the treatment of parents as domestic terrorists, and the FBI’s use of its powers to pressure social media companies to censor Americans’ opinions.”
The report said the COVID panel will review the government’s “funding of gain-of-function research, the use of taxpayer funds and relief programs to address the pandemic, the effectiveness of laws and regulations to address the Coronavirus pandemic and prepare for future pandemics, the development of vaccines and treatments and the implementation of vaccine mandates for federal employees and the military.”
Also read:
- POLL: Do the proposed changes to the Clark County Council’s Rules of Procedure suggest the council lacked authority in 2025?A new reader poll asks whether proposed changes to the Clark County Council’s Rules of Procedure indicate the council lacked clear authority during a 2025 board removal.
- Legislation from Rep. John Ley aiming to restore fairness and local control to transit governing boards, is scheduled for a public hearingLegislation introduced by Rep. John Ley seeks to revise state law governing transit boards and is scheduled for a public hearing later this month in Olympia.
- Dr. Ricardo ‘Rocky’ Torres-Morales selected as superintendent of Vancouver Public SchoolsVancouver Public Schools has selected Dr. Ricardo “Rocky” Torres-Morales as its next superintendent following a months-long national search and extensive community engagement process.
- Battle Ground Police arrest 41-year-old in child sexual assault investigationBattle Ground police arrested a 41-year-old man in connection with a child sexual assault investigation that began in 2022 and remains active.
- Do the County Council’s proposed changes to Rules of Procedure prove Belkot was correct?Clark County Council discussions about rewriting its Rules of Procedure raise new questions about whether Michelle Belkot’s removal from the C-TRAN board last year lacked clear authority under existing rules.
- Washougal High School students restoring native habitat on campusStudents in the Washougal High School Green Team are restoring the campus courtyard into a native habitat learning space with support from local grants and community partners.
- Letter: ‘HSD needs to give a detailed line-item accounting of where the last levy went, and of how they plan to use this one’Randall Schultz-Rathbun urges Hockinson School District to provide detailed, transparent accounting of past and proposed levy spending before asking voters for additional funds.








