The new HFAC: A mixed bag on foreign aid

Rep. Ed Royce of California, incoming chairman of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee. Photo by: House Foreign Affairs Committee / CC BY-NC

A group of lawmakers who will help steer U.S. foreign affairs in the next two years has just been announced - and their interest, not surprisingly, is more on national security issues than foreign aid reform, a Devex investigation suggests.

The Republican members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee were named Jan. 3. The new chairman, Rep. Edward Royce, has already identified tackling Iran’s nuclear program and other perceived threats to U.S. security as top priority for the panel; he also wants to help advance U.S. economic growth overseas and guide the Obama administration’s shifting focus toward Asia-Pacific.

However, more immediate HFAC priorities early this year include a highly anticipated hearing featuring testimony by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi, which killed the ambassador and three other Americans, as well as the budget negotiations that will soon kick off with a series of hearings featuring the heads of the Millennium Development Corp. and U.S. Agency for International Development.

Royce’s fellow Republicans to serve with him on the committee are: 

Republican freshmen who are joining the committee with a limited background on foreign aid issues include Rep. Paul Cook (CA), Rep. George Holding (NC), Rep. Randy Weber (TX), Rep. Scott Perry (PA), Rep. Steve Stockman (TX), Rep. Ron DeSantis (FL), Rep. Trey Radel (FL), Rep. Doug Collins (GA), Rep. Mark Meadows (NC), Rep. Ted Yoho (FL) and Rep. Luke Messer (IN).

Democrats on the committee will be led by Rep. Eliot Engel, including several incumbents and the following freshmen: Rep. Alan Grayson (FL), Rep. Juan Vargas (CA), Rep. Brad Schneider (IL), Rep. Joe Kennedy (MA), Rep. Ami Bera (CA) and Rep. Alan Lowenthal (CA).

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