House Recommends Criminal Contempt of Congress Charges Against Mark Meadows
We ran the numbers: There are 1387 news articles covering this topic. 57% (792) are left leaning, 28% (390) are center, and 15% (205) are right leaning.
The House voted to refer former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows on criminal contempt of Congress charges. While left-leaning articles highlight that Meadows provided some documents to the committee before refusing to testify under subpoena, right-leaning articles highlight that U.S. Representative Jim Jordan tore into House Democrats after they and some Republicans voted to hold Meadows in contempt of Congress.
A left-leaning article by MSN highlights that Meadows provided some documents to the committee before refusing to testify under subpoena. The committee chairman, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said Meadows refused to testify at a deposition after providing 9,000 pages of documents to the panel.
NPR published a centrist article reporting that lawmakers want testimony and other information from Meadows to advance investigation into the storming of the Capitol on January 6. If Congress does charge Meadows, the action heads to the Justice Department.
A right-leaning article by Fox News highlights that U.S. Representative Jim Jordan tore into House Democrats after they and some Republicans voted to hold Meadows in contempt of Congress. Jordan, an Ohio Republican, asserted the vote was strictly a case of Washington politics.
From the right
Meadows contempt vote by House Dems draws sharp rebuke from GOP's Jim Jordan
Washington Examiner