Republican sees larger role for federal watchdogs

— The Republican who will lead the chief investigative committee in the House is planning to vastly expand scrutiny of the Obama administration by seeking new subpoena powers for dozens of federal agency watchdogs in hopes of using their investigations and his own in a push to cut spending and shrink the government.

Rep. Darrell Issa of California, who will take over aschairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, has said the government needs “to go on a diet” to help erase the annual budget deficit of $1.4 trillion. His goal as chairman, he said in a recent speech, is to “focus on places where money can be saved, where we can literally close agencies or subagencies or programs.”

It is a far broader policy mandate than was embraced by predecessors in both parties, who viewed their role as chief congressional inquisitor of the executive administration.

“What my committee has to do is, it has to stretch what it has done in the past,” Issa said.

His agenda may surprise some congressional Democrats and White House officials who are bracing for Issa to paper Washington with investigative subpoenas in a broader crusade to bring down President Barack Obama.

But it is in sync with the Republican leadership’s desire to be seen as concentrating on problems of concern to voters rather than partisan combat. The likely next House speaker, John Boehner of Ohio, has told top Republicans on every committee that their efforts, including oversight of government operations, should focus on the economy and jobs and especially on ferreting out waste, fraud and abuse with an eye toward cutting spending.

Issa has already drawn up a list of big targets: $40 billion a year in fraud or waste in Medicare; $8.5 billion in losses by the Postal Service in the last fiscal year; tens of millions of dollars spent on redundant programs within federal agencies or squandered through corrupt contracting procedures.

He also is looking at tens of billions of dollars in subsidies to the government-controlled mortgage giants, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Fannie Mae is the Federal National Mortgage Association; Freddie Mac is the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.

Boehner and Issa are also counting on other congressional committees to step up their oversight efforts. The Ways and Means Committee, for instance, along with the Energy and Commerce Committee, will pick apart aspects of the new health-care law. The Financial Services Committee will scrutinize the administration’s efforts to tighten regulation of Wall Street.

Issa, whose committee can delve into any corner of the government, has sought to play down the unfettered power to compel testimony and forcethe production of documents through subpoenas that he will gain with his new post in January. Instead, he has put greater emphasis in recent weeks on pursuing legislation to grant subpoena power to the inspectors general in dozens of federal agencies, internal watchdogs who he believes are even better positioned to hunt for waste.

The current oversight committee chairman, Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., and Issa jointly supported a bill authorizing subpoena powers for inspectors general, but Democratic leaders did not make it a priority.

Issa has declined interview requests in recent weeks. Aides said he was waiting for his formal appointment as chairman, which is expected this week. But Issa has made no secret of his plans, which he has described in public remarks before and after the election and in a 17-page blueprint for greater oversight that he issued in September.

He has said he wants his panel’s seven subcommittees each to hold two hearings a week for 40 weeks beginning at the start of the new Congress in January.

In response, Earl Devaney, the chairman of the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, which oversees government stimulus spending, quipped to fellow inspectors general: “Guess where someof us are going to be hanging out this year?”

But even before he sets after the executive branch, Issa is fighting a more immediate battle, preventing cuts to his own committee by Republican leaders. “That’s a case I have to make,” Issa said in a speechto investigators, auditors and prosecutors at a conference on fraud prevention in Philadelphia this month. “I have already made it to Leader Boehner and Eric Cantor,” he said, “that oversight on my committee cannot be cut just to make some symbolic statement, that I am going to need the resources.”

In recent months, in his role as the senior Republican on the oversight committee, Issa has courted the inspectors general, raising serious questions, for instance, about the administration’s dismissals of the inspectors general for Amtrak and for the Corporation for National and Community Service.

The federal deficit cannot be closed simply by rooting outwaste and fraud, and Issa readily acknowledges that many examples he cites will save what amounts to relative pennies in a $3.5 trillion budget.

For his committee to succeed, he said, “We are going to need sources of waste that go beyond just corruption, sources of waste that go into the question of why do we have, even within one cabinet position, seven or eight different groups doing the same thing.”

In a brief conversation with reporters just off the House floor the other day, Issa expressed little interest in pursuing questions about the scientific basis for some Environmental Protection Agency rules, suggesting that there were not sufficient taxpayer savings to be found.

“I’ll have limited resources and limited time,” he said. “I am looking for the largest dollars of waste.”

Front Section, Pages 5 on 11/28/2010

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