Five key takeaways from McCarthy’s historic
ouster as US House speaker
‘Chaos’ erupts after McCarthy is removed from the post
nine months after he secured the gavel through 15 rounds of voting
Jenna
Amatulli in New York
Tue 3 Oct
2023 19.01 EDT
The US
House of Representatives voted to remove Kevin McCarthy from the speaker’s
chair on Tuesday, making McCarthy the first speaker of the House in US history
to be removed from the job.
McCarthy,
who had only been in the post for nine months, set the wheels in motion for his
removal last weekend when he collaborated with Democrats in an effort to fund
the government and avoid a shutdown. That move prompted the hard-right
congressman Matt Gaetz of Florida to introduce a motion on Monday night to oust
him.
Despite
efforts from McCarthy and his allies to put a stop to Gaetz’s proposal, their
motion failed in a vote by 208 to 218. A final vote was held on Tuesday
afternoon and saw eight hard-right Republicans joining 208 Democrats to remove
McCarthy from his post. The final vote was 216 to 210, in favor of McCarthy
getting the boot.
Here are
five takeaways from the tumultuous event:
The House has a new – temporary – speaker: Patrick
McHenry
As we’ve
noted above, this is the first time in history that a speaker has been removed
so the House has entered uncharted territory.
According
to House rules, McCarthy would have been required to draft a list of names for
the clerk of fellow members, in the event of his vacancy. According to Rule I,
clause 8, whomever McCarthy put next on that list “shall act as Speaker pro
tempore until the election of a Speaker or a Speaker pro tempore”.
That person
was the North Carolina Republican Patrick McHenry, who has now taken over as
House speaker pro tempore, or “for the time being.” McHenry is the chair of the
financial services committee, and voted against removing McCarthy.
Given
McCarthy’s chaotic 15-ballot election in January, it seems all but certain that
another multiple ballot election will ensue.
This may open the door for Steve Scalise
Representative
Steve Scalise of Louisiana, currently the No 2 House Republican, has been
mentioned as McCarthy’s potential successor. Gaetz notably called out the
longtime rival of McCarthy on Monday in a chat with reporters.
“I am not
going to pass over Steve Scalise just because he has blood cancer,” Gaetz said.
Scalise,
who is currently undergoing chemotherapy treatment for blood cancer, announced
his diagnosis in August, calling the illness “very treatable” and noting that
it had been detected early.
We’ll likely continue to see a galvanized Gaetz
Gaetz, who
had been critical of McCarthy long before the latter took the speakership,
lambasted the disgraced politician shortly after his ousting as “a creature of
the swamp”.
“He has
risen to power by collecting special interest money and redistributing that
money in exchange for favors,” Gaetz said on Tuesday during an interview on
CNN. “We are breaking the fever and we should elect a speaker who is better.”
Gaetz
doubled down on his vote of confidence for Scalise, telling the network in
response to a question of whether he would now nominate Scalise: “I think the
world of Steve Scalise. I think he would make a phenomenal speaker.”
Given that
Gaetz used the vote to boot McCarthy as a means to fundraise for himself, he is
expected to make more trouble for the House in the coming weeks.
The GOP is now in full-fledged ‘chaos’
No one
likes to live in unprecedented times, but – yet again – here we are. Eight
Republicans voting in favor of removing McCarthy illuminates the burgeoning
fissures amid the GOP. Those eight included representatives Andy Biggs of
Arizona, Ken Buck of Colorado, Tim Burchett of Tennessee, Eli Crane of Arizona,
Bob Good of Virginia, Nancy Mace of South Carolina, Matt Rosendale of Montana,
and Gaetz.
The former
Republican vice-president Mike Pence, speaking at an event at Georgetown
University in Washington, DC, said: “Chaos is never America’s strength and it’s
never a friend of American families that are struggling. I’m deeply
disappointed that a handful of Republicans have partnered with Democrats to
oust Kevin McCarthy as speaker of the House.”
House Rules
committee chairman Tom Cole told CNN things are now unclear.
“Nobody
knows what’s going to happen next, including all the people that voted to
vacate … they have no plan. They have no alternative at this point. So it’s
just simply a vote for chaos,” Cole said.
Neither side of the aisle knows what’s going to happen
next with some saying it looks ‘apocalyptic’
During his
attempt to keep McCarthy as speaker, congressman Tom McClintock of California
declared that “if this motion carries, the House will be paralyzed”.
“We can
expect week after week of fruitless ballots while no other business can be
conducted. The Democrats will revel in Republican dysfunction and the public
will rightly be repulsed,” McClintock said.
He went on
to predict that Democrats would then “enlist a rump caucus of Republicans to
join a coalition to end the impasse. This House will shift dramatically to the
left and will effectively end the Republican House majority that the voters
elected in 2022. And this, in turn, will neutralize the only counterweight in
our elected government to the woke left control of the Senate and the White
House at a time when their … policies are destroying our economy and have
opened our borders to invasion.”
Lest he
hold back at all, McClintock continued ominously: “There are turning points in
history whose significance is only realized by the events that they unleash.
This is one of those times. We are at the precipice. There are only minutes
left to come to our senses and realize the grave danger our country is in at
this moment. Dear God, grant us the wisdom to see it and to save our country
from it.”
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