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Nancy L. Rogers's avatar

I'm curious, David. Remember Ted Cruz' recommendation on Jan. 6, that a nonpartisan commission should study the allegations of election fraud in certain states and give a report of its findings within ten days? The recommendation was rejected, of course, but I wonder if that commission would actually have been nonpartisan, as Pelosi's investigation claimed it would be.

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Curtis Stinespring's avatar

David, I know you work for a living but surely you have seen some of the televised congressional hearings. Every question, every comment and every parliamentary move by either party is partisan. A commission would be no different. The party in charge would produce a 300-page report that sole purpose is to bash the opposition party. No one would read it but, assuming the democrats are in charge, their media allies would make sure the excerpts most damaging to Republicans is given wide distribution. The Republicans would then issue a minority statement which no one would read and only Fox News and a few other right-leaning media outlets would report on it.

The commission would waste tons of money hiring pretend experts to find theories that support the contention of the majority party. The leaked information and lies would, assuming the democrats are in charge, would be reported by major news outlets while Republican rebuttals would never be mentioned. Even if the Republican party was in charge, the democrat leaks and lies would still be most widely reported.

Any useful information would be uncovered by a DOJ investigation. Nothing useful comes from congress. It is all biased and any bipartisan actions are compromises that are typical of committees without real leadership. Congress should follow the lead of the Texas legislature and meet for 147 days once every two years. The permanent political class and their 30,000 employees are the bane of this nation.

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