The perils of, and tips for, testifying in a congressional oversight hearing

8 minute read

Congressional oversight is proving to be a main focus of the 118th United States Congress, with dozens of investigations already underway and congressional committees having held many more oversight hearings since the start of the current Congress. There are four main reasons for the significant uptick in congressional oversight. First, with Republicans controlling the House of Representatives and Democrats controlling the Senate, both parties enjoy committee gavels from which to pursue their separate oversight priorities. Second, with limited opportunities for legislative agreement between the houses, congressional oversight is a way each committee can devote its resources to score political and policy points. Third, for major legislation that does occur, in recent years, much of the policy decision-making has been pulled away from committees and into congressional leadership offices, giving committees less to do in terms of holding legislative hearings or markups—other than congressional oversight. Finally, in the age of cable news and social media, congressional activity has become increasingly performative in nature; there are few better ways for members of Congress to perform for the camera than an oversight hearing.

All of this leads to the likelihood that many more witnesses—from senior executives to everyday individuals caught up in political controversy—will be called before congressional committees. Although there is a wide range of oversight hearings—from those with a single witness under attack from both sides to multi-witness hearings about topics generally and not the witness specifically—all pose substantial risks to those called before a committee. To mitigate these risks and avoid common mistakes, it is important to understand the oversight hearing process, best practices for hearing witnesses, and thoroughly prepare with an experienced team.

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