'I Didn't Come to Congress to Be Silent,' Says Omar as GOP Removes Her From Foreign Affairs Panel

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House Republicans on Thursday voted to remove Rep. Ilhan Omar from the chamber's foreign affairs committee, a step that prompted fury from Democratic lawmakers who called the GOP's resolution an act of "unbelievable bigotry."

"This debate today is about who gets to be an American," Omar, an outspoken defender of global human rights and trenchant critic of U.S. foreign policy, said in a floor speech ahead of the vote.

"What opinions do you have to have to be counted as American? This is what this debate is about," Omar continued. "There is this idea that you are suspect if you are an immigrant. Or if you are from certain parts of the world, of a certain skin tone, or a Muslim."

"Is anyone surprised I'm being targeted?" Omar asked. "Is anyone surprised that I am somehow deemed unworthy to speak about American foreign policy? Frankly, it is expected, because when you push power, power pushes back."

The congresswoman ended her remarks on a defiant note, declaring, "I didn’t come to Congress to be silent... My leadership and voice will not diminish if I am not on this committee for one term."

\u201cRepresentation matters.\n \nWe didn\u2019t come to Congress to be silent.\n \nWe came to Congress to be a voice for families who are displaced in refugee camps and those seeking justice around the world.\n \nBecause that\u2019s what this child survivor of war would have wanted.\u201d
— Rep. Ilhan Omar (@Rep. Ilhan Omar) 1675357773

Thursday's vote came after the handful of Republicans who had previously expressed opposition to removing Omar from the foreign affairs panel flipped their votes to yes. One Republican, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), voted present.

Every House Democrat who voted opposed the measure.

In the debate that preceded passage of the resolution, Democratic lawmakers rallied to Omar's defense, spotlighting the GOP's association with and embrace of neo-Nazis and condemning the resolution as a racist stunt veiled as a rebuke of antisemitism.

"Republicans are waging a blatantly Islamophobic and racist attack on Congresswoman Omar," said Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.). "This is despicable."

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), who is Jewish, said in her impassioned remarks that she doesn't "need any of you to defend me from antisemitism," referring to the Republican side of the aisle.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), a top ally of Omar's, dismissed the GOP's rationale for the resolution and characterized the vote as "racism and incitement of violence against women of color in this body."

"Don't tell me that this is about a condemnation of antisemitic remarks when you have a member of the Republican caucus who has talked about Jewish space lasers," Ocasio-Cortez said, a reference to Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), for her part, cast the vote as an attempt to "distract the American people from the fact that they have absolutely no legislation to bring to the floor that would actually help" them confront real-world problems.

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