CONGRESSIONAL
MEMO
Past Is Prologue in the Republican Speaker Fight
The current chaos is not the first time Republicans
have found themselves rocked by a vacancy at the top.
Carl Hulse
By Carl
Hulse
Reporting
from the Capitol
Oct. 13,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/13/us/politics/republican-speaker-gingrich-jordan.html
The House
speaker had been unceremoniously dumped by colleagues unhappy with his
performance and overly optimistic political predictions. Those who would
typically be considered next in line had made too many enemies to be able to
secure the necessary numbers to take his place. The House was in utter chaos as
bombs fell in the Middle East.
Today’s
relentless Republican turmoil over the House speakership has striking parallels
to the tumult of 1998, when House G.O.P. lawmakers were also feuding over who
would lead them at a crucial period.
Then as
now, personal vendettas and warring factions drove an extraordinary internal
party fight that threw the House into chaos. The saga had multiple twists and
turns as Republicans cycled through would-be speakers in rapid succession —
just as the G.O.P. did this week. And in the end, they settled on a
little-known congressman as a compromise choice.
It’s not
clear how the current speaker drama will end; Republicans left Washington on
Friday after nominating their second candidate for speaker of the week,
Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio, with plans to return on Tuesday for a vote
but no certainty that he could be elected.
Back in
1998, Republicans moved swiftly to fill their power vacuum in just one day,
unlike the present situation, where they have let unrest fester for more than a
week while struggling to overcome deep internal divisions and anoint a new
leader.
“That was
pretty chaotic,” said Representative Harold Rogers, the Kentucky Republican who
was already a veteran lawmaker at the time and is now the dean of the House as
its longest-serving member. “But it didn’t last very long.”
Both dramas
began when a Republican speaker lost the faith of some key colleagues.
Hard-right Republicans precipitated their party’s current crisis by forcing out
Representative Kevin McCarthy of California from the speaker post as punishment
for working with Democrats to avert a government shutdown. Twenty-five years ago,
Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Georgia Republican whose closest allies were turning
on him, announced he would not run again for speaker.
Mr.
Gingrich, whose scorched-earth tactics had returned Republicans to the majority
in 1995 after four decades in the minority wilderness, was finally burned
himself after predicting Republican gains in that November’s elections, only to
lose seats.
Representative
Richard K. Armey of Texas, who held the same majority leader position then as
Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana does today, was a potential
replacement, as was Representative Tom DeLay, the powerful No. 3 Republican
whip who was also from Texas. But both had political baggage likely to keep
them from the top job, and Mr. Armey faced a fight just to remain in the No. 2
slot.
Neither
even bothered going through the motions of seeking their party’s nomination, as
Mr. Scalise did successfully on Wednesday — only to discover quickly that he
lacked the support to be elected, leading to his abrupt withdrawal.
“Both of
them were toxic, and they knew it,” Fred Upton, the recently retired moderate
Republican from Michigan who was in the House at the time, said of Mr. Armey
and Mr. DeLay.
Sensing an
opportunity, Robert Livingston, an ambitious Louisiana Republican who commanded
a solid bloc of supporters as chairman of the Appropriations Committee, jumped
into the speaker’s race and cleared the field. He won the Republican nomination
without opposition in mid-November.
Mr.
Livingston went about setting up his new leadership operation as Republicans
plunged ahead with the impeachment of President Bill Clinton growing out of his
relationship with a White House intern. Many Republicans believed the
impeachment push had cost them in the just-concluded election, but pursuing Mr.
Clinton was a priority of Mr. DeLay, whose nickname was the Hammer, and he was
not one to be deterred.
Then
Saturday, Dec. 19, arrived, with the House set to consider articles of
impeachment even as Mr. Clinton had ordered airstrikes against Iraq over
suspected weapons violations — an action that Republicans accused him of taking
to stave off impeachment.
Mr.
Livingston, who had not yet assumed the speakership but was playing a
leadership role, rose on the floor to urge Mr. Clinton to resign and spare the
nation a divisive impeachment fight. But Mr. Livingston himself had
acknowledged extramarital affairs a few days earlier to his colleagues.
Democrats began shouting “no, no, no” as he spoke.
“You
resign,” shouted Representative Maxine Waters, Democrat of California. “You
resign.”
To the
amazement of everyone present, Mr. Livingston did just that, saying that he
would set an example for the president and that he would not run for speaker.
The House was stunned as lawmakers absorbed the news — similar to the surreal
atmosphere last week when it became clear that Mr. McCarthy would be removed as
speaker after hard-right Republicans moved to oust him and eight of them joined
Democrats in pushing through a motion to vacate the chair.
A mad
scramble was on to identify a new speaker candidate. Names of prominent and
seasoned House Republicans were bandied about, but Mr. DeLay, a singular force
in the chamber, was not about to accept one of them as a potential rival.
He turned
to a fairly innocuous Illinois Republican who had watched Mr. Livingston from
the back row of the House, J. Dennis Hastert, a former wrestling coach who
served as Mr. DeLay’s chief deputy and would not be a threat to usurp much of
his influence. Mr. DeLay and others told Mr. Hastert that he needed to step up
to unify Republicans.
By the end
of the day, Republicans had approved articles of impeachment against Mr.
Clinton and coalesced around Mr. Hastert as the next speaker — a rapid
resolution that Mr. Upton noted was lacking in the present speaker drama. He
said Republicans should have moved much more quickly after the vote to depose
Mr. McCarthy to install someone rather than recessing for the week.
“It would
have been over and done with,” Mr. Upton said.
Mr. Hastert
went on to be the longest-serving Republican speaker in history before
Democrats won the House back in 2006. But his public career ended in disgrace
when he was convicted and sentenced to 15 months in federal prison in 2016 for
paying to cover up admitted sexual abuse of young wrestlers committed long
before he rose to surprising power in Congress.
Mr. DeLay,
his patron, was forced from Congress by ethics issues but ultimately had his
conviction on campaign finance violations thrown out of court. Mr. Livingston
went on to become a successful Washington lobbyist. Mr. Clinton was acquitted
by the Senate. Mr. Gingrich remains a voice in G.O.P. politics. And Republicans
still struggle with speaker issues.
Carl Hulse
is chief Washington correspondent and a veteran of more than three decades of
reporting in the capital. More about Carl Hulse


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário