CONGRESS
Trump’s spell over GOP breaks with McCarthy
meltdown
The ex-president has endorsed the congressman for the
Speaker role. But that hasn’t been enough to sway the skeptics.
By MERIDITH
MCGRAW and NICHOLAS WU
01/04/2023
09:38 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/01/04/trumps-republicans-mccarthy-speaker-00076482
It was the
second day of chaos on the floor of the House of Representatives when Rep.
Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) took the previously unthinkable step of thumbing her
nose at Donald Trump, the ex-president she otherwise venerates.
“Let’s stop
with the campaign smears and tactics to get people to turn against us — even
having my favorite president call us and tell us to knock this off. I think it
actually needs to be reversed and the [former] president needs to tell Kevin
McCarthy you do not have the votes and it’s time to withdraw,” Boebert said.
“Ooo”s from Democrats could be heard from the chamber.
The
inability of McCarthy to secure the needed votes to be House Speaker — despite
six tries at doing so — represents a unique failure on his part. But it has
also called into question the extent of Trump’s own power to shape the party in
his image, coming at a time when some Republicans have openly soured on his
current run for the presidency.
“If these
20 people are successful in exerting their will over the 200 more Republicans
who want McCarthy, and deny McCarthy the speakership, then it will be a huge,
huge hit against President Trump, because the people who he’s supposed to have
the most influence with didn’t listen to him,” said Rodney Davis, the outgoing
Republican congressman from Illinois.
The
Trump-McCarthy relationship has taken several turns over the years, most often
defined by loyalty from the latter toward the former. It was McCarthy who went
down to Mar-a-Lago after Jan. 6 to meet with a seemingly exiled Trump and,
implicitly, keep him in the fold.
Trump, in
turn, has offered his support to McCarthy’s speaker ambitions even as
contemporaneous materials surfaced showing the congressman’s frustrations with
his presidency. After Republicans took back the House, Trump was in contact
with members of the anti-McCarthy wing, publicly expressed his support for
McCarthy, and even warned those waging battles against McCarthy that they were
setting up a “doomsday scenario” in the House.
He worked
the phones behind the scenes in support of McCarthy.
But Trump’s
endorsement of McCarthy has not been enough to sway the so-called Never-Kevins,
who each have their own personal issues with the California congressman and
have pushed for additional demands over the course of the past few weeks,
including amending the procedure for ousting a House Speaker and committee
assignments. The hardliners pushing against McCarthy have included Freedom
Caucus members from the most MAGA wing of the GOP, with Rep. Matt Gaetz,
(R-Fla.) — no stranger to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club — helping lead the pack.
They’re insistent, though, that the vote against McCarthy isn’t a vote against
Trump.
“I would
suggest that of the 20 who’ve been voting against Kevin McCarthy, they are
friends with President Trump. They like President Trump, they support President
Trump. However, this is a vote of 222 members of the Republican Party,” said
Rep. Bob Good (R-Va.). He declined to comment on any calls with Trump but
added, “I’m voting against Kevin McCarthy because it’s what I believe to be
right for the country.”
“It didn’t
move the needle,” Gaetz said of Trump’s McCarthy endorsement.
Trump’s
defenders stress that his endorsement alone would never have been enough to
push McCarthy over the needed vote threshold. One person close to Trump said he
was “playing it safe,” trying deliberately not to attack anyone while
recognizing that the 20 GOP lawmakers opposed to McCarthy have differing
reasons for doing so.
“I know a
lot of people are focusing on Trump’s ‘waning influence’ regarding this speaker
vote,” said the person. “I think it would be a different story if Trump was
attacking someone and they still wouldn’t budge. That would signal waning
influence. … If anyone wants to suggest waning power or influence then I think
they’re off base because Trump hasn’t gone full Trump mode.”
Other GOP
luminaries argued that the problem facing the party over the past few days was
not Trump’s influence but rather the strategic thinking of a small minority of
House members. Asked about Boebert’s comments, former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich bluntly criticized the Colorado Republican.
“Did you
see the margin by which she was elected?” he said. “I don’t put much stock in
what she says and I don’t think Trump does either. Trump admires McCarthy and
if the attack is from the so-called right, then it’s pretty hard to explain why
they’re against someone Trump is supporting.”
“I don’t
think they care,” Gingrich added. “I think this is all about personal attitudes
and bitterness and to me it’s kind of amazing to watch.”
Despite
such protestations, Trump’s enthusiasm for McCarthy has come into question over
the past 48 hours, and with it speculation about his eagerness to shape the
contours of Republican politics.
Trump has
not appeared in public to make the case for McCarthy; nor did he post to his
site Truth Social about the failed speaker votes early evening on Tuesday when
he grumbled about Republican dysfunction and attacked Senate GOP leader Mitch
McConnell.
That same
night, Trump and McCarthy talked on the phone but it wasn’t until the next
morning that the former president issued another Truth Social post that was
then circulated around to House Republicans calling for McCarthy’s speakership.
Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, (R-Ga.), a McCarthy ally, told reporters Trump’s
endorsement helped to stave off even more defectors. But other Republicans said
the endorsement — in which Trump said McCarthy would be a “good” speaker and
“maybe great” — demonstrated that the former president maybe wasn’t fully
committed to the cause.
“It was a
very strong message by Trump that he had to think overnight after McCarthy’s
three failed speaker votes to offer a tepid endorsement. McCarthy begged like a
dog and got table scraps at Mar-a-lago,” said Mike Davis, a former GOP Senate
aide and Trump ally.
But Davis,
like other allies of the ex-president, said the House floor disagreements were
a reflection of distrust among some in the party of McCarthy and not a sign of
Trump weakness.
“Trump’s
already made it clear he’s not enthusiastically supporting McCarthy, that he
didn’t give his endorsement before the three failed votes,” said Davis. “Trump
has stayed out of this. What has Kevin McCarthy done for Trump? McCarthy let
Pelosi fill the January 6 commission with her people and they used that as a
sledgehammer against Trump.”
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