OPINION
MICHELLE
GOLDBERG
Leopards Eat Kevin McCarthy’s Face
Jan. 4,
2023
By Michelle
Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/04/opinion/kevin-mccarthy-speaker-race.html
As we
approach the anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack, it’s been grimly amusing to see
that the party of insurrection can’t even manage the orderly transfer of power
to itself. Rarely does karma play out so neatly.
Kevin
McCarthy nurtured the spirit of reactionary nihilism in the Republican Party,
first by trying to harness the energy of the Tea Party for his own ambition,
and then by his near-total capitulation to Donald Trump. Now the chaotic forces
he abetted have, at least for the moment, derailed his goal of becoming House
speaker, subjecting him to multiple public humiliations at what was supposed to
be his moment of triumph.
It is still
possible that McCarthy will manage to eke this thing out by making even more
concessions to the growing bloc of Republicans who oppose him. It is not
possible, however, that he’ll emerge, in any real sense, as a leader.
Unable to
corral his caucus for what is usually an easy vote, there is no chance McCarthy
would be able to get them on board for hard ones, like keeping the government
open or raising the debt ceiling to avoid plunging the country into default.
His best-case scenario is that he’d be a fragile figurehead, a hostage to the
hard right and constantly in danger of defenestration. And even that scenario
looks increasingly out of reach.
McCarthy’s
approach to the far right has always been one of indulgence. Despite his own
apparent lack of ideological conviction, he recruited many of the Tea Party
candidates elected to the House in 2010. As Robert Draper, the longtime
chronicler of the Republican Party, wrote in 2011, they represented “McCarthy’s
more entrepreneurial approach to politics: seize upon a trend (in this case,
government phobia), put all your money on it and then work hard to make the
trend last.” McCarthy persisted in this approach as the Tea Party evolved into
Trumpism, earning Trump’s patronizing sobriquet: “My Kevin.”
Marginalizing
Trump after Jan. 6 would have been politically risky for McCarthy, no doubt.
But by flying to Mar-a-Lago to abase himself before Trump just weeks after the
attack on the Capitol — signaling to all that Trump remained the leader of the
Republican Party — McCarthy helped seal his own fate. Trump is a major reason
the Republican House margin is as small as it is; voters rejected many of
Trump’s handpicked candidates, as well as the party’s broader election
denialism. And though Trump himself has endorsed McCarthy, many of his
disciples are hostile to anyone associated with the Republican establishment.
As The
Times reported, of the 20 lawmakers who, as of this writing, have voted against
McCarthy, 17 were endorsed by Trump in 2022. Five of them are freshmen — these
are people who are part of Trump’s remaking of the Republican Party. Arizona’s
Eli Crane, for example, is a former contestant on the business reality show
“Shark Tank,” where he pitched bottle openers made of dummy .50-caliber bullets.
(“Shoot open some bottles in the manliest way possible,” says an ad for the
product.) Florida’s Anna Paulina Luna, an ally of the Trump die-hard Matt
Gaetz, is a veteran and former swimsuit model who built a career as a
conservative rabble-rouser, most recently running Hispanic outreach for the
right-wing outfit Turning Point USA. These people seem to be crafting brands as
much as political careers, meaning they benefit from high drama and have little
need to work their way through Republican institutions.
The
movement these characters are part of — one McCarthy hoped would carry him to
power — isn’t simply ideological. It’s also a set of defiant, paranoid,
anti-system attitudes, and a version of politics that prioritizes showboating
over legislating. That’s why McCarthy has found himself unable to negotiate
with the holdouts. There are no real policy stakes, no concessions he can make
on issues. The anti-McCarthy faction’s demands are largely about power and
visibility, and whenever he meets those demands, they move the goal posts.
McCarthy
evidently believed that by courting Georgia’s Marjorie Taylor Greene, an avatar
of hyper-performative politics, he could co-opt her wing of the party. He was
set to offer her valuable committee assignments, and, according to Draper, had
even offered to create a new leadership position for her. But her elevation
would be valuable to other Trumpists only if there were concrete things they
hoped to accomplish together. Putting Greene on the Oversight Committee does
nothing to help those who aspire to her notoriety. They don’t want policy; they
want airtime.
One of the
most amazing aspects of the House Republican crackup has been watching Greene’s
angry exasperation as her shot at real power is imperiled by attention-seeking
hard-liners. “They’re proving to the country that they’re just
destructionists,” she said on Sunday. It was the embodiment of the Twitter
meme: “‘I never thought leopards would eat MY face,’ sobs woman who voted for
the Leopards Eating People’s Faces Party.”
By bowing
first to Trump and then to Greene, all McCarthy has done is show other
Republicans how much there is to gain from pushing him around. His downfall
isn’t surprising: Almost no one who has sold his or her soul to Trump has come
out ahead. (The jury is still out on the Republican conference chair Elise
Stefanik.) The reason these deals with the devil always go bad, I suspect,
isn’t metaphysical. It’s simply that Trump sycophants are ultimately undermined
by their weak and flabby character.
McCarthy’s
Republican opponents are right in surmising that he believes in nothing and
will yield under pressure; the evidence is his inability to stand up to them. His
mistake was convincing himself that a party obsessed with dominance would
reward submission.
Michelle
Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several
books about politics, religion and women’s rights, and was part of a team that
won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace
sexual harassment. @michelleinbklyn



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