NEWS
ANALYSIS
Speaker Fight Reveals a Divided and Disoriented
House Majority
In failing to coalesce around Kevin McCarthy for
speaker, Republicans showcased divisions that portend real difficulties in
governing.
Carl Hulse
By Carl
Hulse
Jan. 3,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/03/us/house-speaker-mccarthy-election.html
WASHINGTON
— House Republicans began their new majority rule on Tuesday with a chaotic and
historic debacle, an embarrassing failure to rally around a leader that
showcased the difficulties they will face in performing even the basics of
governing and their lack of a unifying agenda.
Handed
narrow control of the House by voters in November, Republicans squandered the
opening hours of the new Congress they could have used to dispel concerns about
their capabilities. Instead, they feuded in a disorderly display over who among
them should be speaker as the most extreme elements of the new majority
repeatedly rejected Representative Kevin McCarthy of California.
Despite Mr.
McCarthy’s prominent role in fund-raising and delivering the House to
Republicans and his backing among most in the party ranks, about 20 Republicans
refused to support him and for the first time in a century forced repeated
rounds of voting for the speakership. After three flailing attempts at electing
a speaker, Republicans abruptly called for the House to be adjourned until noon
Wednesday as they scrambled for a way out of their leadership morass. The
stalemate meant the usually routine organization of the new House did not occur
and its members were not sworn in, nor could any legislation be considered.
The paralysis
underscored the dilemma facing House Republicans: No matter the concessions
made to some of those on the far right, they simply will not relent and join
their colleagues even if it is for the greater good of their party, and perhaps
the nation. They consider themselves conservative purists who cannot be
placated unless all their demands are met — and maybe not even then. Their
agenda is mostly to defund, disrupt and dismantle government, not to
participate in it.
It means
that whoever emerges from the messy leadership fight will face deep-seated
resistance when trying to shepherd spending bills and other measures that are
fundamental to governance. Tuesday’s spectacle reflected that House Republicans
have grown more skilled at legislative sabotage than legislative success,
leaving the difficult business of getting things done to others.
“The rebels
just don’t like McCarthy, and they seem to not be able to find a way to like
him,” said John Feehery, a longtime Republican strategist and former top House
aide. “They lack a legislative maturity to understand it can’t be personal. It
has to be just business.”
Mr.
McCarthy himself sought to make the conflict about something bigger than
himself in an appeal to his opponents to put aside whatever feelings they had
about him so Republicans could move forward.
“This can’t
be about that you are going to leverage somebody for your own personal gain
inside Congress,” Mr. McCarthy told reporters. “This has to be about the
country.”
But the
holdouts were not yet budging.
“I have
heard nothing new from Kevin,” said Representative Lauren Boebert, Republican
of Colorado and a McCarthy foe, between rounds of votes.
To try to
quell the revolt, Mr. McCarthy had already promised new rules that would open
him or another figure to regular efforts to depose them from the speakership,
along with requirements that would leave the leadership hamstrung and at the
mercy of conservatives in trying to advance legislation.
Representative
Jim Jordan, the Ohio Republican and hard-right alternative for speaker favored
by some conservatives, conceded that the legislative outlook was limited at
best, considering that bills favored by House Republicans were unlikely to pass
in the Democratic Senate or to be signed by President Biden.
“So be it,”
said Mr. Jordan in nominating Mr. McCarthy. “They have to answer to the people
in 2024.”
He also
alluded to what was likely to be an epic struggle to keep the government
running and stave off a disastrous debt default with Republicans in charge of
the House, saying that their principal task was to ensure that Congress never
again passed the kind of sprawling spending bill enacted last month.
The
breakdown on the House floor was the latest and most pronounced of the assaults
by the hard right on its own congressional leadership in recent years.
Archconservatives drove out John A. Boehner in 2015, denied Mr. McCarthy the
votes needed to succeed Mr. Boehner at the time and complained about the
stewardship of the compromise consensus choice of Paul D. Ryan. But Tuesday’s
attack was their most aggressive yet, a nationally televised implosion that
showcased the intransigence and unwillingness to compromise of a segment of
House Republicans in what should have been a moment of triumph.
Even
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, typically a Republican
firebrand eager to stir turmoil, castigated those holding out on Mr. McCarthy
because of how it reflected on the party’s image.
“If the
base only understood that 19 Republicans voting against McCarthy are playing
Russian roulette with our hard-earned Republican majority right now,” Ms.
Greene said on Twitter. “This is the worst thing that could possibly happen.”
Democrats
were enjoying the tumult to a degree but also recognized the problems it could
mean down the road. Representative Mike Quigley, a senior Democrat from
Illinois, said the speaker fight was the culmination of a growing Republican
ethos of “taking their ball and going home” if they fail to get what they
demand.
Other
Democrats watched in amazement as they saw Republicans open their reign with a
clash that would leave whoever was eventually chosen badly undermined and the
party’s strength diluted from the start.
“What a
weakened position they have put themselves in,” marveled Representative Rosa
DeLauro, a senior Democrat from Connecticut.
The uproar
in the House was in marked contrast to the opening day of the Senate, where
seven new members were sworn in and senators then quietly adjourned for three
weeks. While House Republicans were ensnared in a brutal internal battle, Senator
Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican and minority leader, was scheduled to
appear alongside President Biden on Wednesday to celebrate funding for a major
public works project in Kentucky.
As they
sought a way out of their dilemma, some Republicans acknowledged the poor
message they were sending with the stalemate but also said that it was likely
to be a distant memory with voters once the leadership question was resolved.
“Just like
everything in three months that becomes small ball, it becomes insignificant,”
said Representative Ken Buck, Republican of Colorado. “In a year and a half,
when people are starting to think about voting again, they are not thinking
about that. They are thinking about what have we accomplished. It is more
important to do things than it is to have a good first impression.”
His
colleagues no doubt hope Mr. Buck is correct.
Carl Hulse
is chief Washington correspondent and a veteran of more than three decades of
reporting in the capital. @hillhulse




Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário