Amid growing calls to resign, Feinstein heads back to Capitol Hill
Faced with mounting calls to resign due to the impact of her extended absence, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein headed to Washington, D.C. on Tuesday after being away since late February while recovering from shingles.
TheĀ San Francisco Chronicle reportedĀ that the California Democrat “boarded a chartered private plane” and “could return to the Senate as early as Tuesday evening.” Feinstein spokesperson Adam Russell confirmed her departure to the newspaper.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement that “I’m glad that my friend Dianne is back in the Senate and ready to roll up her sleeves and get to work. After talking with her multiple times over the past few weeks, it’s clear she’s back where she wants to be and ready to deliver for California.”
Feinstein, who is 89, has already said she will retire at the end of the current term, and three California Democrats in the U.S. HouseāReps.Ā Barbara Lee,Ā Katie Porter, and Adam Schiffāhave launched campaigns for next year’s primary.
Demands for Feinstein to step down early have been building since last spring, when theĀ Chronicle reportedĀ that based on interactions with the senator, some of her colleagues were concerned she is mentally unfit to continue serving. During her recent absence, Feinstein has missed 91 floor votes.
The missed votes, Democrats’ narrowĀ controlĀ of the chamber, and the GOP’s refusal to let Schumer temporarilyĀ replaceĀ Feinstein on the Senate Judiciary Committee so the panel can advance President Joe Biden’s judicial nominees, have fueled fresh calls for her to resignāincluding from someĀ membersĀ ofĀ Congress.
Ahead of the news of Feinstein’s return on Tuesday, former Labor Secretary Robert Reichāwho described himself as “one of her personal friends as well as one of her constituents”āwroteĀ that “as someone in his late 70s, let me be clear. I’m not suggesting an age limit on public service. I’m only suggesting vigilance.”
Feinstein “has accomplished many worthy things since she was first elected to the Senate in 1992,” Reich noted, detailing some of them. “She has said she will retire at the end of 2024, but too much damage is being done in the interim. If she can no longer perform her duties, it is now time for her to step down.”
CongressmanĀ Ro KhannaĀ (D-Calif.)āwho isĀ co-charingĀ Lee’s 2024 campaign and recently called for Feinstein’s resignationāsaidĀ in a statement Tuesday that he is “very glad” the senator “is feeling better and hopeful that she will be able to fulfill her duties upon her return.”
“The people of California deserve strong representation and a senator who can vote to advance President Biden’s judicial nominees and protect Americans’ fundamental rights,” he added. “The three-month absence hurt our agenda, and time will tell on the future.”
The senator’s return “will put two nominees in the spotlight, in part because Feinstein’s absence is not the only vote holding them up,”Ā Politico noted, pointing to Biden’s nomination of Michael Delaney for the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Julie Su forĀ labor secretary.
Feinstein also comes back to a Congress engaged in a battle over raising theĀ debt ceilingĀ amid estimates that the U.S. government could run out of money to pay its bills as soon as June 1. After meeting with Biden and other congressional leaders at the White House Tuesday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.)āwho is threatening a catastrophicĀ defaultĀ unless Democrats agree to huge spending cuts that would impact working peopleāsaidĀ that “I didn’t see any new movement.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org.