COLUMN |
ALTITUDE
After Another Failed Vote, McCarthy’s Speaker Bid
Is Starting to Look Pathetic
A purely transactional approach to politics can only
get you so far, especially in today’s Republican Party.
Kevin McCarthy can rest assured he has earned a legacy
— as a symbol of pathos and ineffectuality, an emblem of the cannibalistic
spirit of the age. |
By JOHN F.
HARRIS
01/03/2023
07:51 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2023/01/03/mccarthy-speaker-vote-fail-00076248
John Harris
is founding editor of Politico. His Altitude column offers a regular
perspective on politics in a moment of radical disruption
Just two
months ago, when Republicans underperformed historical trends in the midterm
elections and a bunch of extremist candidates lost winnable races, the
consensus view among many commentators was that American politics was at last
“returning to normal.”
Okay, then.
Tuesday’s drama surrounding the GOP’s efforts to elect a speaker to lead its
wafer-thin House majority is normal only in the sense that the past generation
has made the politics of chaos, confusion and contempt come to seem normal.
By any
historical standard, however, vivid evidence that one chamber of the national
legislature is essentially ungovernable is a high-water moment. Kevin McCarthy,
whatever the outcome of this contest in coming hours or days, can rest assured
he has earned a legacy — as a symbol of pathos and ineffectuality, an emblem of
the cannibalistic spirit of the age.
That age,
McCarthy’s travails make clear, is not defined exclusively by former President
Donald Trump. Recall that the first time McCarthy vied for the speakership —
eight years ago, before dropping out in the face of right-wing opposition —
occurred before Trump entered the presidential race and made himself the most
important figure in the Republican Party. This time around, McCarthy is stumbling
even as he holds Trump’s endorsement.
That the
McCarthy backlash both predates and postdates Trump’s presidency is a reminder
that Trump was someone who exploited the politics of contempt but was not the
cause of it, and suggests that he may be only glancingly relevant to some
questions facing the future of the conservative movement.
McCarthy
and his allies had signaled before the voting began that he was prepared to
insist on vote after vote, for days if necessary, to grind down opposition and
win vindication for his desperate plea, in a Monday closed-door meeting, that,
“I’ve earned this job.” By early Tuesday evening, after McCarthy lost a third
vote, that strategy was looking increasingly problematic. The Californian was
effectively asking that his own party match him in tolerance for televised
public humiliation. Still, no viable alternative to such self-abasement had
emerged.
One must
squint through the smoke of recent years to recall a time when the conservative
movement was shaped by instinctual deference to authority — to establishment
priorities and establishment values. When it came to selecting leaders,
according to the old saying, Democrats needed to fall in love, while
Republicans were content to fall in line.
By the
third vote, 202 Republicans were willing to do that, including members who have
privately questioned his leadership in biting terms. But 20 were not, and decisively
so. That minority faction was acting with justifiable confidence that they were
being faithful to the organizing principle of contemporary conservatism:
Contempt for any figure who doesn’t also share an attitude of contempt or
express it with sufficient purity.
McCarthy,
of course, had done his level best. He had spent years raising money for his
party. He had muzzled his faint and momentary impulse to stand up to Donald
Trump after the Jan. 6 riot. He turned on his one-time ally Liz Cheney to chase
her out of the party. Cheney’s experience showed that taking a stand comes at a
political cost. McCarthy’s experience may soon show that refusing to take a
stand does, too.
McCarthy
had given so many concessions to his party’s Freedom Caucus as to guarantee
that the speakership is one-step above a symbolic post, with little ability to
set an agenda or exert leverage on anyone to promote it.
Surely, he
had imagined, all these gestures of propitiation would be enough. But the
evidence so far is that they simply reinforced the image held by opponents —
and seemingly by some supporters — that he is a politician without genuine
convictions, with little ability to instill fear or respect.
Congressional
leadership requires carrots or sticks. For the holdouts, McCarthy had neither
things they want nor things they fear. Who does have those things? In a
revealing sign of the times, Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, who wants to be part of
McCarthy’s leadership team as chief deputy whip, said the answer may be
right-wing commentators: “We’ll see what happens when Tucker [Carlson] and Sean
Hannity and Ben Shapiro start beating up on those guys. Maybe that’ll move it.”
Fundraising
help? A born publicity hound like Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) can easily raise
money independently and doesn’t worry about falling out of good graces with
party leadership, to the extent he was ever in such graces to begin with. What
about budget bouquets to show voters back home that their member of Congress
has real clout? A sincere ideologue like Rep. Chip Roy (R-Tex.) doesn’t care
about these things. He thought McCarthy was not a real conservative in 2015,
and he hasn’t changed his mind in 2023.
Gaetz and
Roy, in fact, are good windows into the composite nature of the anti-McCarthy
coalition. Part of it is motivated by disruption for its own sake — party
strife, and playing to the angriest faction of the Republican crowd generates
more news coverage and is more interesting than the serious work of
coalition-building and governance.
One House
Republican told my colleague Olivia Beavers: “I love shitshows and this is a
shitshow to behold.” Another wing of GOP dissidents is so motivated by sincere
anti-government belief that they will never bring themselves to support someone
they perceive as a transactional operator.
But if
that’s the McCarthy opposition, what of his support? He ran in part on
attributes — his fundraising prowess, his accommodating manner with GOP
colleagues — that would be entirely relevant for a post like head of the
National Republican Congressional Committee, devoted to helping win elections.
One thing he didn’t run on: Anything approximating a big idea about governance.
This makes
McCarthy’s bid different than the one that vaulted Newt Gingrich and his team
of “revolutionaries” to power a generation ago, after the 1994 election. Nor is
McCarthy committed to anything like the sunny-side-up conservatism that Paul
Ryan evangelized on behalf of, even if he couldn’t do much to advance that in
his four years as speaker beginning in 2015.
McCarthy’s
troubles show that a purely transactional approach to political power has
natural limits. They also show that a contempt-driven approach to politics so
far has not reached its limits.
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