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Texas Democrat to Head House Intelligence Panel
By Jonathan Weisman, Washington Post
December 2, 2006
House Speaker-elect Nancy
Pelosi (D-Calif.) named Rep. Silvestre
Reyes (D-Tex.) to chair the House intelligence
committee yesterday, skipping over the two most
senior Democrats on the panel to hand the
sensitive post to a Vietnam War veteran and
former U.S. Border Patrol
agent.
Pelosi signaled weeks ago
that she would not elevate the panel's top
Democrat, Rep. Jane Harman (Calif.), to the
chairmanship and announced this past week that
she would also pass over Rep. Alcee L. Hastings
(D-Fla.), who could not overcome the stigma of
his 1988 impeachment and 1989 removal from a
federal judgeship.
Reyes, a five-term
House member from El Paso, is a well-liked
Democrat. And now, as a key party spokesman on
national defense issues, he becomes perhaps the
most visible Latino in
Congress.
"Congressman Silvestre
Reyes has impeccable national security
credentials," Pelosi said. "When tough
questions are required, whether they relate to
intelligence shortcomings before the 9/11
attacks or the war in Iraq, or to the quality
of intelligence on Iran or North Korea, he does
not hesitate to ask them."
Reyes
signaled that he will use his post to confront
the Bush administration on national security
and intelligence issues that he said
Republicans have shied away
from.
"On warrantless tapping, on
their policy on detention and interrogation,
their policy on secret prisons, all of those
have undermined our position in the world,"
Reyes said in an interview yesterday. "And we
have been complicit in Congress by
rubber-stamping everything the administration
has proposed."
"It's a good, solid
appointment," said former congressman Timothy
J. Roemer (D-Ind.), a member of the bipartisan
commission that examined the attacks of Sept.
11, 2001.
But Reyes has been
linked to past controversies. The inspector
general of the government's General Services
Administration looked into the serious failures
of a $239 million network of cameras and
sensors along the Mexican and Canadian borders,
an investigation that focused in part on the
contractor's employment of Reyes's daughter
Rebecca.
Reyes has been a key backer of
the system and its contractor, International
Microwave Corp. Shortly after its 1999 contract
award, the firm hired Rebecca Reyes to serve as
a liaison to what was then the Immigration and
Naturalization Service. She ultimately became
IMC's vice president for contracts. IMC also
hired her brother, Silvestre Reyes Jr., as a
technician on the program, known as the
Integrated Surveillance Intelligence System, or
ISIS.
Rep. Reyes said that he
never interceded on his daughter's behalf or
with U.S. officials to help her company win a
contract, and that he backed the firm's search
for funding only because he supports the system
of border sensors and cameras. And, he said,
the investigation was concluded with no charges
of improprieties by the company, his daughter
or himself.
The choice of a House
intelligence chairman has been a difficult one
for Democrats. Pelosi's decision to skip over
Hastings angered the Congressional Black
Caucus, prompting some consideration of Rep.
Sanford Bishop (D-Ga.). Bishop, an African
American, had been bumped from the committee in
2001 to make room for Harman, who returned to
the House after an unsuccessful gubernatorial
bid.
The Congressional Hispanic
Caucus launched its own campaign for Reyes, a
past caucus chairman. While African Americans
will chair four House committees next year,
including the powerful Ways and Means and
Judiciary committees, Latinos were slated to
head only one, the small-business
panel.
"We felt we needed more of
a presence than that," said Rep. Raul M.
Grijalva (D-Ariz.). "What the leadership has to
understand is, as more of us are integrated
into high-profile leadership positions, the
more we can help in the long run to solidify
this constituency with the party. That can only
help the Democratic Party."
After
the Vietnam War, Reyes served with the Border
Patrol for a quarter of a century, from Texas
to Georgia, rising to chief patrol agent in El
Paso, where he cut the flow of illegal
immigrants by more than half, an achievement
that propelled him to the
House.
Reyes's task now will be to
balance the need for bipartisanship on a
sensitive committee with the demands of many
Democrats, including Pelosi, to push the Bush
administration hard on its program of
warrantless wiretapping of terrorism suspects,
its network of secret CIA prisons and the
scandals left largely unexplored by
Republicans, such as the role of intelligence
officials in Iraq's Abu Ghraib
prison.
"How do you make a
committee that's supposed to work in a
bipartisan way work that way and keep the
support of the caucus?" Roemer asked. "That is
a delicate balance."
Staff writer
Shailagh Murray contributed to this report.
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