Jeff Van Drew believes that the congressional investigations into the snowballing farce known as the Trump Administration must cease.

It doesn’t matter what House committees look into. It could be Russian subterfuge, election security, obstruction of justice, Donald Trump’s tax returns, his fake charity, the questionable financing of his real estate projects, or the president’s role in the campaign finance violation that landed his lawyer in jail, a case in which he was named an unindicted co-conspirator.

Van Drew’s thesis: “We must finalize these investigations and bring all of this to a conclusion in a timely manner. The people are exhausted with the bad gift that keeps on giving: the Mueller Report. They are tired of the investigations. They are tired of the accusations. They are tired of the reports,” the congressman from South Jersey (D-2nd Dist.) says.

He added that congressional efforts are “wasted on these investigations,” and that “their continuation will only perpetuate civil unrest.”

That’s a mouthful, and while Van Drew walked back some of it in a 20-minute phone conversation Tuesday, he is dismissing a key point: Upholding the rule of law and exercising oversight duty should always top the list of congressional priorities.

And given that only 3 of the 20 committees are investigating information related to the Mueller Report, the House is multi-tasking effectively. It isn’t the fault of the Democratic-controlled chamber that every bill it advances — whether it’s related to health care costs, environmental protection, gun safety, or election security — is rejected by the GOP-led Senate.

Van Drew concedes that the lower chamber is “getting some nice bills done,” but he believes the Senate and Trump himself would be more cooperative if the House dropped its probes, which, he implies, the average voter lacks the bandwidth to process anyway.

Van Drew also says he has read the Mueller report “from first page to last page” but somehow concluded that the special counsel “did not adequately make the case” that the president is guilty of any wrongdoing.

What he forgets is that Mueller does not do nuance. The special counsel emphasized that if his office “had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.” He also said that “the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing.”

In other words, there’s a good chance that the president committed a crime.

And that it’s up to Congress to determine that.

Van Drew also shrugs when reminded that 1,000 federal prosecutors say that the 10 examples of obstruction of justice outlined by the Mueller Report warrant formal charges: “I don’t want to make a comment on it, I’m not a lawyer,” he said.

It’s prudent that Van Drew is making up his own mind about whether to proceed with impeachment hearings. Every member must make his or her own call on that matter, which stopped being partisan ever since Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) jumped into the debate with both feet.

And it’s understandable that Democrats from toss-up districts avoid talks of impeachment, and comments about investigations if they don’t serve on the House committees conducting them.

But to suggest that the investigations must cease because their voters cannot take the stress is an abdication of duty. If Van Drew hears a different narrative when he’s “out in the street,” his obligation is to do what Amash did: explain why we cannot allow a sitting president to ignore subpoenas and stonewall Congress just because he thinks he is above the law.

That is part of his job. Van Drew sounds as if he’s afraid to do it.

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