Mike Lee says Judiciary chairmanship ‘hard to turn down’
Senator Mike Lee from Utah expressed interest in perhaps chairing the Senate Judiciary Committee following the sudden death of Senator Lindsey Graham, who was set to assume the role. While Lee finds the chairmanship very appealing and has a strong background in legal matters, he has not committed to relinquishing his current chairmanship of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, as Senate rules limit members to chair only one committee at a time. Graham’s death, caused by a heart condition, surprised colleagues and has created a vacancy in the Judiciary committee, were Lee has served since 2011. Lee described Graham as a close freind and colleague, expressing admiration and sadness over his passing. If Lee succeeds Graham, it would likely shift the committee’s focus further to the right and enable him to push forward priorities like the REINS act, which seeks congressional review of major regulations. Lee also emphasized that his priority for the committee remains permitting reform, which requires bipartisan support. Additionally,Lee participated in White House events and is exploring legislation to make certain executive actions on Utah’s national monuments permanent.
Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) told the Washington Examiner it would be “hard to turn down” a chance to chair the Senate Judiciary Committee after the sudden death of Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) placed him next in line to hold the gavel.
In a Monday evening interview, Lee called the chairmanship “very appealing” but stopped short of saying that he would give up his chairmanship on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee if Republicans maintain their Senate majority this fall. According to conference rules, Republicans can only chair one committee at a time.
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“I also enjoy chairing Energy and Natural Resources, but, like I say, anybody who knows me knows it would be very hard to turn down an opportunity to chair Judiciary,” said Lee, who has an extensive legal background and joined the Judiciary panel in 2011, at the beginning of his first term in the Senate.
Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and John Cornyn (R-TX) are the most senior on the committee, but Grassley is term-limited as its current chairman, and Cornyn will retire at the end of the year after his primary loss in May. Before his death, Graham was slated to take over the panel and previously led it from 2019 to 2021.
Lee praised Graham as a friend and colleague in the interview, noting that they served together on Judiciary for more than a decade and overlapped for years on the Budget Committee, where Graham was serving as chairman.
“As much as anything, he and I were just good friends,” Lee said, adding that his initial reaction to Graham’s death was shock. Graham, 71, died from a heart condition, according to a preliminary medical exam, shortly after he returned from a trip to Ukraine.
“I just still can’t believe he’s gone,” Lee said. “It just seems wrong. It seems like it couldn’t possibly be true. He’s somebody who I keep imagining might show up to his own funeral, like Tom Sawyer.”
“I will miss him badly,” Lee added. “I miss him already.”
Lee’s ascension to the chairmanship would represent a rightward shift for the committee and allow him to advance longtime priorities, including the REINS Act, which requires congressional review of major regulations.
He called any conversation of how he might run the committee “premature” and noted that “a chairmanship presupposes that Republicans still hold the majority.”
On the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Lee said his focus will be permitting reform for the remainder of this Congress, a priority that will require buy-in from Democrats on both his panel and the Environment and Public Works Committee, chaired by Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV).
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“I’ve been working on this for a year, the last year and a half. This needs to happen,” Lee said. “I can’t think of anything going through this committee that is more important.”
Earlier on Monday, Lee appeared at the White House for the signing of executive orders shrinking the size of two national monuments in Utah, his home state. Lee told the Deseret News he is looking for ways to make the orders permanent through legislation.
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