Sherman joins race for House Foreign Affairs gavel
Rep. Brad Sherman (Calif.), the second-ranking Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, announced on Wednesday his bid to chair the panel.
Sherman made his announcement in a letter to Democratic lawmakers asking for their support, stressing his seniority on the panel and engagement in increasing the number of Democrats in the House, and adding that he has done “everything asked of me, and more”.
The California lawmaker is challenging his colleagues Reps. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) and Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) ahead of the exit of current chairman Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), who will leave the House next year after losing his district’s primary race.
Democrats are favored to win control of the House come November, making whomever is chosen as top Democrat on the committee panel next year’s chair.
Sherman is considered a long shot for the gavel despite his ranking on the committee, where top Democratic posts are often decided by seniority within the panel.
Meeks, the third-ranking member, and Castro, the 10th-ranking member, are expected to be the front-runners, more representative of the national call to increase diversity in positions of leadership and of the growing progressive wing in the Democratic party.
Sherman on Wednesday sought to distinguish himself from his competitors, saying he would abandon the traditional ethos of the Foreign Affairs committee that policy should be bipartisan, and advance Democratic legislation over minority opposition.
“Traditionally, Foreign Affairs Committee markups have been by consensus. I would depart from that tradition to pass bills that reflect Democratic priorities, even over the objections of the minority party,” he wrote in his letter to colleagues.
Sherman further said he would focus the committee’s priorities on Africa and Latin America and stressed a commitment to human rights, inspired by his wife’s work at the State Department in the Bureau of Democracy and Human Rights, he said.
He touted his experience of 24 years on the committee and his most recent authorship of the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, signed into law last week by President Trump, that directs sanctions against Chinese officials and entities known to have violated Hong Kong’s independence.
“For almost 24 years, I have served on, and dedicated my professional life to, the Foreign Affairs Committee. I have served on every one of the Committees’ six subcommittees, and I have served as Chair or Ranking Member of a Foreign Affairs subcommittee for over 17 years,” Sherman wrote.
“I look forward to listening to my colleagues on how we can best utilize the Foreign Affairs Committee to advance Democratic values,” he added.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Regular the hill posts