Clinton's Benghazi interrogator is veteran prosecutor
Is popular on YouTube
Calls his dogs Judge, Jury and Bailiff
“You just don’t burn cars because they won’t start,” he said. “Unless you have something you want to hide.”
A year later, Trey Gowdy was elected to Congress, where his hard-nosed prosecutorial style is casting him in a much larger drama. At stake: his own reputation and the perhaps the political fate of a potential future president of the United States.
This Thursday, he will lead the high-stakes interrogation of Hillary Clinton over her role in the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans. And Clinton won’t be the only one on the hot seat. Gowdy, the 51-year-old chairman of the House committee investigating the attacks, finds himself defending the panel against charges that it’s only a partisan Republican effort to derail Clinton’s presidential campaign.
“He would much rather be a prosecutor than be a politician, it plays to his strengths,” said fellow South Carolina Republican Rep. Mick Mulvaney.
“Trey does not like politics, he likes finding the truth,” said Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C. “He stopped doing 70 percent of his shows like going on Fox, because this is a serious opportunity to find the truth and he wants to be less involved in the political process.”
Despite Gowdy’s insistence that he wants to stay out of the national political spotlight, since arriving in Washington he has amassed a popular following among conservatives on social media for his direct style that lends itself well to YouTube videos and sound bites.
His Southern accent and youthful, blunt manner in interviews delight online fans – in a popular 2014 clip he declared he gets “tougher questions in the Bojangles drive-thru” than what the media asked Susan Rice about Benghazi. It’s a familiar style to those who worked with him when he was a solicitor in Spartanburg.
“He’s one of the best trial attorneys I’ve ever seen, and he don’t waste anybody’s time,” said Barry Barnette, who worked with Gowdy for a decade and took over his solicitor post.
“When he was in court it didn’t take as long to try cases, because he just got to the meat and potatoes by being very straightforward.”
Gowdy was elected to Congress in 2010.
Now, critics say that his committee has spent $4.5 million and has little to show except a partisan hunt targeting Clinton. The panel has expanded its focus from the attacks themselves and now includes her use of a private email server while secretary of state.
“This may not be politically correct, but I think that there was a big part of this investigation that was designed to go after people, an individual, Hillary Clinton,” Rep. Richard Hanna, R-N.Y., told a Utica radio station on Wednesday.
This came after House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., openly credited the panel with lowering Clinton’s poll numbers on Fox News earlier this month.
“Hillary Clinton will still attend next week’s hearing, but at this point, Trey Gowdy’s inquiry has zero credibility left,” said her campaign spokesman, Brian Fallon.
“He tried so hard to make this committee apolitical, and these comments from McCarthy and Hanna probably bother him more than anything that’s happened in Congress,” said Mulvaney.
“Politics gets infused into it despite all of his attempts. He has bent backwards to be deferential and unbiased, yet nobody seems to want to believe him because they’d much rather believe political spin,” he said.
Complicating any attempt to ward off appearances of a partisan agenda, against Clinton or for himself, conservatives have pushed to get Gowdy into the Republican leadership of the House of Representatives.
Tea party groups urged him for months to challenge now-outgoing Speaker John Boehner, even putting together a “Draft Gowdy” campaign.
When Boehner stepped down last month, Gowdy had his statement ready: still not interested.
“Trey wants to go back to South Carolina and God bless him for that,” Rep. John Fleming, R-La., told CSPAN, adding that at the end of the term Gowdy would return to “spend the rest of his life there.”
“We have a lot of fun, we eat dinner together twice a week. I’m always making fun of his dark suits and light socks,” Scott said.
Fashion choices aside, Scott has big hopes for his friend after he leaves Congress.
His focus on getting it done has changed little since his prosecutor days, when he spoke about the murderer of a Spartansburg hairdresser on a 2008 episode of “Forensic Files.”
“He’s a pathological, maniacal liar, and I don’t like him. But he received a fair trial.”
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