Analysis
House speaker saga underscores Republican party’s
dramatic evolution
Lauren
Gambino
in
Washington
Party still faces issue of how to reunite their
fractious majority and prove to skeptical US public that they are capable of
governing
Fri 13 Oct
2023 18.26 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/oct/13/no-house-speaker-what-it-means-republicans-divided
The US
House of Representatives will remain leaderless into a third week as
Republicans continue to confront a familiar conundrum: how to unite their
fractious majority and prove to a skeptical US public that they are a party
capable of governing, not just funneling rightwing outrage and culture war
rhetoric.
More than a
week after a cadre of discontented Republicans deposed their own speaker, Kevin
McCarthy, the conference is still deeply divided over who should replace him
with no one candidate seemingly able to garner enough support to end the
squabbling.
Congressman
Steve Scalise, the House majority leader, won the first secret internal
election to be the party’s nominee to be speaker on Wednesday but by Thursday
evening he had withdrawn his consideration.
On Friday,
Republicans met again and chose his challenger, congressman Jim Jordan of Ohio,
a founder of the ultraconservative House Freedom caucus and one of Donald
Trump’s most loyal allies on Capitol Hill. But the behind-closed-doors vote
showed he was still a staggering 65 votes short of the 217 needed to get the
job.
If Jordan
were to eventually win – and a floor vote could now come on Tuesday next week –
it would be a remarkable victory for the hard-right faction of Republican
lawmakers. After years of driving their party’s speakers from power, they are
now on the cusp of claiming the gavel for themselves.
But victory
is far from certain in a Republican party once known for its iron discipline
and ability to stay on message but now seen as a group of politicians scrapping
for power and influence among themselves.
The long
saga to elect a new speaker underscores the dramatic evolution of the House
Republican conference, whose own members now fear may no longer be governable.
As McCarthy’s short tenure proved, grievance not the gavel is the coin of the
realm in present-day Republican House politics. And whenever there is a handful
of discontented Republicans, dysfunction is likely to follow.
“These guys
want to be in the minority,” Congressman Don Bacon of Nebraska, who represents
a swing district being targeted by Democrats, told reporters on Thursday. “I
think they would prefer that because they could just vote no and yell and
scream all the time.”
In another
era, it would have been unthinkable for House Republicans to undermine their
party’s chosen candidate for speaker. But in present-day Republican politics,
there are often more incentives than consequences for breaking the rules and
thwarting the majority.
Case in
point: Jordan was elected to be the party’s candidate to lead the House, days
after losing to Scalise in the House’s internal election for speaker. But an
intervention on his behalf by Donald Trump, and a refusal by his supporters to
stand down, blocked Scalise’s path and afforded Jordan a second chance at the
nomination.
It marks
quite the journey for the Ohio congressman, who the former Republican House
speaker John Boehner once branded Jordan a “legislative terrorist”. Jordan and
his allies tormented Boehner until he left the post. Boehner’s successors
worked harder to appease the right flank of their party, but it did little to
ease the internal unrest.
Among the
many concessions McCarthy made to the far right in exchange for their support
for his speakership bid was a rule allowing any single member of the House to
force action on a resolution to remove the speaker. It won him the gavel, after
an unprecedented 15 rounds of balloting, but it also sealed his fate as the
first speaker in US history to be removed from the position.
Tensions
were already boiling on the right, when a handful of ultraconservative
Republicans revolted and triggered his ouster last week. They were angry with
McCarthy for forging an 11th-hour deal with Democrats to avoid a government
shutdown. It came after McCarthy worked with Democrats and the White House
earlier this year to avert a calamitous debt-default, which they viewed as a
betrayal.
Since his
removal, McCarthy has insisted he would not have done it differently.
“I think
it’s important whoever takes that job is willing to risk the job for doing
what’s right for the American public,” McCarthy said, insisting he did what a
speaker should do when faced with government closure: compromise with the
minority party.
Yet Jordan
has shown repeatedly that he is willing to risk a debt default or government
shutdown when the alternative means a compromise with Democrats. Jordan voted
earlier this month against a measure that kept the government open.
A fixture
of rightwing media, the Ohio congressman is better known for his hardball tactics
and loyalty to Donald Trump than his legislative accomplishments, of which
there are few. Vanderbilt University’s Center for Effective Lawmaking ranked
Jordan 217th out of 222 House Republicans in the 117th Congress. Compare that
to Scalise who ranked 95th.
In 2018,
Jordan was instrumental in triggering the longest federal government shutdown
in US history. Two years later, he helped amplify Trump’s lies about the 2020
election and voted against certifying the electoral college vote in the hours
after the January 6 assault on the US Capitol. Over the last year, he has used
his position as chair of the House judiciary committee to pursue
politically-motivated investigations into Biden and his administration.
Several of
the party’s relatively moderate members, especially those who represent
districts Biden won in 2020, are wary of where a Speaker Jordan might lead. But
whether there is an appetite to find a more mainstream alternative remains to
be seen.
Congress is
under pressure to respond to the war between Israel and Hamas, there is the
question of additional funding for Ukraine as it attempts to repel invading
Russian forces, and the stopgap bill to keep the government open is set to
expire in mid-November.
With
Americans, and the world, watching, Republicans are poised to return to the
House floor next week to once again attempt to elect a new speaker. But whether
Jordan wins or loses, it all sets the stage for another combustible
speakership.

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