POLITICS
Opinion | The Culture of House Republicans Is
Warped
Time to isolate Marjorie Taylor Greene and her
comrades.
Opinion by
BRENDAN BUCK
05/08/2024
10:12 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/05/08/marjorie-taylor-greene-speaker-chaos-00156774
Brendan
Buck served as an advisor to House Speakers John Boehner and Paul Ryan. He is
currently a partner at communications firm Seven Letter.
The speaker
of the House is a big job. Yet a small group of deeply unserious people has
consumed an inordinate and growing amount of the speaker’s time over the last
12 years.
Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene has given us fresh evidence of that this week as she
threatened to pull the trigger on a vote to oust Speaker Mike Johnson only to
deescalate — at least temporarily — after multiple meetings with him. But the
standoff, for all its foolishness, gives the House a chance to reverse this
drift and serve as a turning point toward becoming a more deliberative body
once again.
Over the
House’s more than two centuries, there has no doubt been all manner of cranks
and questionable characters serving in the institution. It is a modern
phenomenon, however, that we pay them so much attention. Today, congressional
politics revolve around a rump group of lawmakers who typically hold no
significant role on committees, often have served just a few terms, and whose
rhetoric implies only a tenuous grasp of political reality.
We must
stop taking them so seriously. We need a bipartisan pact that we’re going to
stop letting the people who delight in the absurd have an outsize influence in
the House. It would be good for the institution, good for Republicans and even
good for Democrats.
Both
parties have their gadflies and their fringes, but the reality is that the
forces fueling historic levels of congressional dysfunction are coming from a
small but growing group of Republican hard-liners. And it’s infected the
culture of the broader House GOP. I’ve seen that up close, having previously
served as an adviser to Speakers John Boehner and Paul Ryan.
Lately,
Greene has accused Johnson, a conservative derided by the left as “MAGA Mike,”
of literally being a Democrat. She’s among a swath of Republicans who insist a
tiny House majority can foist a conservative agenda upon a Senate and White
House controlled by Democrats.
Similar
nonsense was thrown at Johnson’s predecessors whenever they would strike a
necessary bipartisan agreement. Republicans have indulged this ridiculous
thinking too long; indeed, doing so has only emboldened the hard-liners from
one speakership to the next.
Boehner
could barely tolerate many members of the Freedom Caucus, and he did little to
hide it. Ryan believed a dash of inclusivity and an open line of communication
would moderate their worst instincts, and he held a weekly lunch with members
from different pockets of the conference, including Freedom Caucus leaders.
Kevin McCarthy went so far as to give the chair of the Freedom Caucus a seat at
the leadership table.
No matter
the approach, the threats from the far right never subsided.
Johnson
similarly spent much of his first six months in office chasing around their
unrealistic demands until he, surprising many, decided to pass a domestic
funding agreement and a large foreign aid package with broad bipartisan
support.
Greene’s
threat to try to boot Johnson using the motion to vacate is the latest turn in
a cycle that makes the House a miserable place to serve.
That’s why
this moment offers an opportunity for both parties to begin to fix the House.
Democrats
have already pledged the votes needed to protect Johnson, but only once. If
Greene does reverse herself and force a vote against the speaker, he should be
prepared to go further than just defeating it. He should call another vote to
change the House rules so that one member alone cannot trigger the motion to
vacate. This will require Democratic help, but it can be presented as a
commitment to govern honestly rather than continually at the mercy of Greene or
others operating on bad faith. Similarly, if hard-liners keep defeating
procedural votes on the floor as they have in record number this year, Johnson
should normalize the practice of bipartisan rules — again working with
Democrats to effectively govern the floor if he must.
What people
like Greene crave more than anything is attention. And the motion to vacate is
their most potent tool for commanding it. It is the weapon that has, even in
quieter times, hovered over the thinking of four straight GOP speakers. When
that weapon is taken away, there is a completely different equation for
leadership, allowing for rational decision making about what is best for the
Republican Conference and the House.
Of course,
taking away the motion to vacate does not solve all the speaker’s troubles. As
we have seen in spectacular fashion this Congress, hard-liners can still make
it more difficult to bring bills up for a vote, and they will still be able to
raise money and play to the conservative media in ways that undermine their
colleagues.
That is why
this is not a problem that leadership alone can address. The rank and file,
too, must not tolerate criticism that defies the obvious realities of divided
government. There is a cultural peculiarity in the House GOP where it is almost
taboo to say out loud that a conservative priority is not immediately
achievable. Even behind closed doors, few words are devoted to what can
reasonably be attained. Everything must be grounded in a fight for the
maximalist position. And whenever conservatives foil a more realistic plan,
they do so with impunity.
Change
starts with a shift in culture of the House GOP Conference. It must be okay to
say true things, like that hard-liners are making policy outcomes less
conservative, not more, by refusing to back their own speaker.
As we have
seen, change also requires cooperation from Democrats. It is reasonable for the
minority party to question why they should be in the business of protecting a
Republican speaker from conservative hard-liners. We should not pretend that
Democrats’ primary goal isn’t to take back the House. And it is fair to believe
continued chaos in the GOP majority sends a signal that it is not a party
capable of governing. At the same time, there is also little evidence that
these leadership fights break through with voters, especially by the time they
go to the polls.
What’s
more, should Democrats take back the House, it’s entirely possible they too
will have a tiny majority, given how few competitive districts we now have.
Democrats are not immune from party infighting, and it would be good for the
whole House if both parties commit to rewarding sanity, not hijinks.
The
alternative today for Democrats is a speaker more beholden to the hard-liners
and an institution incapable of doing even basic responsibilities. A short-term
assist to Greene or like-minded conservative bomb-throwers would do more
long-term damage to an institution that nearly all bemoan as dysfunctional.
Morale on
Capitol Hill is as low as anyone can remember. And why wouldn’t it be? Most
weeks, little gets done, and the House is constantly under threat by people who
have no interest in governing. This has contributed to an unmistakable trend of
members retiring while still in their legislative prime. The U.S. House of
Representatives has become a place where serious people feel like they don’t
fit in.
Whether
that continues is a choice. Johnson, to his credit, has shown that governance
is possible if the loudest, most disingenuous voices are ignored.
If the
hard-liners don’t like it, there is an alternative: act like a majority and
back your speaker. And then win more elections so there are the actual
conditions for conservative governance, not the pretend ones they’ve been
operating under.
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