McCarthy Is Ousted as Speaker, Leaving the House
in Chaos
A handful of far-right Republicans broke with their
party and voted to remove Kevin McCarthy from his leadership post. He said he
would not run again.
“I don’t regret standing up for choosing governance
over grievance,” Representative Kevin McCarthy said at a news conference on
Tuesday after the vote
Catie
Edmondson
By Catie
Edmondson
Reporting
from Capitol Hill
Oct. 3,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/03/us/politics/kevin-mccarthy-speaker.html
The House
voted on Tuesday to oust Representative Kevin McCarthy from the speakership, a
move without precedent that left the chamber without a leader and plunged it
into chaos.
After a
far-right challenge to Mr. McCarthy’s leadership, eight G.O.P. hard-liners
joined Democrats to strip the California Republican of the speaker’s gavel. The
216-to-210 vote reflected the deep polarization in Congress and raised
questions about who, if anyone, could muster the support to govern an
increasingly unruly House G.O.P. majority.
“The office
of speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby
declared vacant,” Representative Steve Womack, Republican of Arkansas, a
McCarthy ally who presided over the chamber during the vote, declared after
banging the gavel to finalize the result.
On this
vote, the yeas are 216, the nays are 210. The resolution is adopted. Without
objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table. The office of Speaker
of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby declared
vacant.
Soon after,
Mr. McCarthy told Republicans behind closed doors that he would not seek to
reclaim the post, ending a tumultuous nine months as speaker. Republicans said
they would leave Washington until next week, with no clear path to finding a
new speaker of the House.
“I don’t
regret standing up for choosing governance over grievance,” Mr. McCarthy said
at a news conference after the meeting. “It is my responsibility. It is my job.
I do not regret negotiating; our government is designed to find compromise.”
It was the
culmination of bitter Republican divisions that have festered all year, and
capped an epic power struggle between Mr. McCarthy and members of a far-right
faction who tried to block his ascent to the speakership in January. They have
tormented him ever since, trying to stymie his efforts to keep the nation from
defaulting on its debt and ultimately rebelling over his decision over the
weekend to turn to Democrats for help in keeping the government from shutting
down.
Before the
vote, a surreal Republican-against-Republican debate played out on the House
floor. Members of the hard-right clutch of rebels disparaged their own speaker
and verbally sparred with Mr. McCarthy’s defenders, who repeatedly accused the
hard-liners of sowing chaos to raise their own political profiles. Democrats
sat and watched silently.
“He put his
political neck on the line, knowing this day was coming, to do the right
thing,” said Representative Tom Cole, Republican of Oklahoma and a McCarthy
ally who sought unsuccessfully to kill the move to oust him.
But Mr.
McCarthy’s critics, led by Representative Matt Gaetz, the far-right Republican
from Florida, savaged him for what they characterized as a failure to wring
steeper spending cuts out of the Biden administration and a lack of leadership.
“Chaos is
Speaker McCarthy,” Mr. Gaetz declared. “Chaos is somebody who we cannot trust
with their word.”
Most of the
eight Republicans who voted to remove McCarthy had antagonized him ever since
he became speaker. Along with Mr. Gaetz, they were: 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 and Matt Rosendale
of Montana.
Only a few
of them rose on the House floor ahead of the vote to list their grievances
against Mr. McCarthy, chief among them that he had relied on Democratic votes
to push through two bills they opposed — one to prevent the nation from
defaulting on its debt for the first time in history and another, over the
weekend, to avert a government shutdown.
“The
speaker fought through 15 votes in January to become speaker, but was only
willing to fight through one failed C.R. before surrendering to the Democrats
on Saturday,” Mr. Good said, referring to a measure known as a continuing
resolution for a stopgap spending bill. “We need a speaker who will fight for
something, anything besides just staying or becoming speaker.”
A tense
scene played out on the floor as lawmakers voted to oust the speaker the same
way they vote to elect one: rising one by one from their seats on the House
floor in an alphabetical roll call by conducted by the clerk.
In the end,
Mr. McCarthy was doomed by just eight members of his own party and a united
caucus of Democrats, all of whom voted to dethrone him.
The vote
left the House paralyzed until a successor is chosen. That promised to tee up
another potentially messy speaker election at a time when Congress has just
over 40 days to avert another potential government shutdown.
House
Republicans met on Tuesday night after the vote to discuss how to move forward.
Discussions on the future of the conference were being led by Representative
Patrick T. McHenry of North Carolina. Mr. McCarthy had named Mr. McHenry first
on a list of potential interim speakers in the event of a calamity or vacancy,
but he does not have power to run the chamber — only to preside over the
election of a new speaker.
There is no
clear replacement for Mr. McCarthy, though some names reliably come up in
conversations with Republicans, including Mr. McHenry and Mr. Cole as well as
the No. 2 and No. 3 House Republicans, Representatives Steve Scalise of
Louisiana and Tom Emmer of Minnesota.
“I think
there’s plenty of people who can step up and do the job,” said Mr. Burchett,
adding that he did not have anyone in mind.
But on
Tuesday, Republicans were scattering to their districts around the country to
regroup, with no clear strategy for how to move forward.
Mr.
McCarthy did not answer questions from reporters after his ouster, striding
quickly off the floor after receiving a barrage of handshakes and hugs from his
allies. In the hours before the vote, Mr. McCarthy, an inveterate optimist who
prides himself on never giving up, was characteristically sanguine, defending
his decision to work with Democrats to avert a government shutdown, which
precipitated the bid to remove him.
“If you
throw a speaker out that has 99 percent of their conference, that kept
government open and paid the troops, I think we’re in a really bad place for
how we’re going to run Congress,” he said on Tuesday morning. In a closed-door
meeting underneath the Capitol, he told Republicans he had no regrets about his
speakership, and was interrupted several times by raucous standing ovations.
In the days
leading up to the vote, Democrats had wrestled with whether to help Mr.
McCarthy survive, or at least to stay out of the effort to oust him.
But their
disdain for Mr. McCarthy ultimately overrode any political will they had to
save him, and in a closed-door meeting on Tuesday morning, Representative
Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the minority leader, instructed fellow Democrats
not to do so, citing Republicans’ “unwillingness to break from MAGA extremism.”
That
meeting, which was billed as a listening session and strategy meeting to
determine how Democrats would vote on Mr. Gaetz’s motion to remove Mr.
McCarthy, quickly became an airing of grievances against the speaker.
The litany
piled up: his vote to overturn the 2020 presidential election results after
pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021; his decision to renege
on the debt limit deal he had brokered with President Biden in the summer to
appease the rebels; his friendly relationship with former President Donald J.
Trump; and his decision to open an impeachment inquiry into Mr. Biden without
evidence of wrongdoing.
“We’re not
voting in any way that would help Speaker McCarthy,” Representative Pramila
Jayapal, Democrat of Washington, said ahead of the vote. “Nobody trusts Kevin
McCarthy, and why should they?”
The irony
was that Mr. McCarthy had made those moves to placate the far-right flank of
his party that ultimately ousted him.
“Speaker
McCarthy has repeatedly chosen to weaken the institution by bending to
extremists rather than collaborating across the aisle,” said Representative
Derek Kilmer, Democrat of Washington. “He has inherited the chaos he has sown.”
Reporting
was contributed by Luke Broadwater, Carl Hulse, Kayla Guo, Karoun Demirjian,
Annie Karni and Robert Jimison.
Catie
Edmondson is a reporter in the Washington bureau, covering Congress. More
about Catie Edmondson


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