CONGRESS
McCarthy: Cawthorn's 'lost my trust' following
orgy and cocaine comments
The GOP leader is not yet revoking the North Carolina
Republican's committee spots, but he signaled he's lost patience with the
freshman lawmaker.
By OLIVIA
BEAVERS
03/30/2022
03:44 PM EDT
Updated:
03/30/2022 04:28 PM EDT
Kevin McCarthy
is fed up with Madison Cawthorn.
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/30/mccarthy-cawthorn-lost-trust-orgy-cocaine-comments-00021816
The GOP
leader said Wednesday — after meeting with the North Carolina Republican that
morning — that Cawthorn has “lost my trust” due to his repeated actions that
were “not becoming” for a congressman. And McCarthy warned the freshman he
could face punishment if he doesn’t take certain steps to turn himself around,
which could include losing his committee spots.
Cawthorn
enraged wide swaths of his own conference when he recently claimed on a podcast
that his colleagues have seemingly invited him to an orgy and that he watched
at least one fellow lawmaker consume cocaine, claiming that the same member was
involved in the anti-addiction efforts. And it’s just the latest episode in a
series of controversial remarks Cawthorn has made.
“There’s a
lot of different things that can happen. But I just told him he’s lost my
trust. He’s going to have to earn it back,” McCarthy said when asked if
Cawthorn could face consequences for his actions, including losing his
committee positions. “I mean, he’s got a lot of members very upset.”
McCarthy
said that, during their private talk, he pointed to “certain things” Cawthorn
needed to start doing professionally and in “his own life as well.” And he
isn’t discounting more meetings with the freshman lawmaker, saying there “very
well could be” more conversations with Cawthorn as GOP leaders assess “what
actions are taken” by him.
“You can’t make statements like that as a member of
Congress, it affects everybody else and the country as a whole,” McCarthy
added.
House
Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) said in an interview that, during their
meeting with Cawthorn, the House GOP’s top two leaders “expressed real concern
with some of the things that he’s done recently. And obviously, the ball’s in
his court in terms of how to respond. But we were very clear with the concerns
we had — and a lot of other members too.”
McCarthy
had vowed to GOP members behind closed doors that he would have a talk with the
freshman about his remarks, POLITICO first reported Tuesday. Scalise also
attended the Wednesday morning meeting.
It was a
notable dressing down from a Republican leader who at other times has seemed
content to leave troublesome members alone. McCarthy was pressured to address
another controversy within his ranks just weeks ago, when Reps. Marjorie Taylor
Greene (R-Ga.) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) attended an event led by a known white nationalist.
McCarthy was less critical about Greene’s behavior, saying he met with the
Georgia firebrand on the matter and that she wouldn’t do it again. It is
unclear if he met with Gosar.
In addition
to the orgy-cocaine claims, McCarthy also cited Cawthorn’s calling Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “thug” as problematic. Plus, Cawthorn had
caused another controversy when he lied to an officer in the Capitol, saying
GOP congressional candidate Robby Starbuck was one of his staffers to bring him
onto the House floor. Additionally, McCarthy said it’s unacceptable for a
member of Congress to be caught driving without a license after failing to show
up to court.
And
McCarthy had some information for Republican lawmakers who have called on
Cawthorn to name names, too. The GOP leader said Cawthorn described the cocaine
incident differently than he did in the podcast. Instead of a lawmaker,
Cawthorn told McCarthy he believes “he thinks he saw maybe a staffer in a
parking garage maybe 100 yards away,” and that Cawthorn told him “he doesn’t
know what cocaine is.”
“It is just
frustrating. There is no evidence behind his statements,” McCarthy said.
It may not
be Cawthorn’s last meeting on the topic. House Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry
(R-Pa.) told POLITICO in an interview Wednesday that he plans to discuss the
matter with Cawthorn, as more than one of the ultra-conservative members in the
group rattle about kicking him out of the caucus. His ouster is still seen as
unlikely.
The remarks
earned Cawthorn anger and opprobrium across the House GOP, including
rank-and-file members who often stay quiet amid big political firestorms.
Rep. Steve
Womack (R-Ark.) suggested he won’t be satisfied if the conversation with the
GOP leaders ended with a simple promise from Cawthorn that he won’t make
comments or suggestions like this again, noting that he has repeatedly caused
headaches for the GOP conference.
“Depends on
what the outcome of the meeting was,” Womack said in an interview. “If it’s:
‘Hey, don’t do that, again.’ We’ve been there. That hasn’t worked. Frankly, if
western North Carolina is not going to fix the problem, then leadership will
have to.”
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