The Republican-ruled U.S. House of Representatives has once again become a broken home, with a promising lawmaker deciding to leave before his current term ends and the latest House Speaker, Mike Johnson, on the ropes.
Representative Mike Gallagher, R‑Wisconsin announced he will quit Congress on April 19th, reducing the Republicans to a one-vote majority. A fellow Republican, Representative Ken Buck of Colorado, who has bucked Trump, was clearing out his office after casting his last vote.
As the. House passed a $1.2 trillion appropriations bill — on the strength of Democratic votes — ultra MAGA Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, R‑Georgia, was on the Capitol steps announcing a motion to vacate the Speaker’s office. A majority of House Republicans had just voted against the bill, described by Speaker Johnson as “the best achievable outcome in a divided government.”
We should take notice out in this Washington. If Democrats flip the House in November, Representative Adam Smith, D‑Wash., will again chair the House Armed Services Committee, Representative Rick Larsen will likely chair the House Transportation Committee and Representative Suzan DelBene will reap the benefits of chairing the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
FNC loves to run Democrats-in-Disarray headlines. But House Republicans have formed an unrivaled circular firing squad, with mounting casualties. The most divisive members of their caucus are favored guests of such Fox hosts as Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham.
Ultra MAGA extremists purged House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, himself a strident partisan, last fall for daring to do a deal preventing a government shutdown. McCarthy subsequently quit Congress. A special election for his California seat, widely considered safe Republican turf, is slated later this spring.
Buck bailed out in disgust at colleagues’ maladroit effort to impeach President Biden. Ditto Gallagher, one of three Republicans to vote against impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. The result leaves Republicans with 217 seats in the 435-member House.
The House has begun a two-week Easter recess, so the earliest Greene can bring up her motion is April 8th. She was coy on timing Friday, telling reporters: “It’s more a warning than a pink slip. We need a new Speaker.”
But Greene, a limelight seeker on a par with Cinderella’s stepsisters, added: “The clock has started. It’s time for our conference to pick a new leader.”
The ability to govern is the acid test of politics, but acid rain is falling on the “people’s house.” But ultra MAGA extremists do not know how to govern and do not want to govern.
Years ago in California, Ronald Reagan instituted a commandment in his party; “Though shalt not speak ill of any Republican.”
Well, that was then. In today’s House, even the crazies are at each other’s throats. Greene was a McCarthy booster, having sold her support for good committee assignments. She took out after Representative Matt Gaetz, R‑Florida, who brought the motion against the Speaker. In turn, on Friday, Gaetz was backing Johnson and laying into Greene.
If Johnson survives a vote to vacate the Speaker’s office, he will need support from the chamber’s 213 Democrats, soon to be 214 after a safely Democratic seat is filled by a special election in New York. (With Gallagher and Buck leaving, four formerly Republican seats are currently or soon vacant.)
Having spent years securing coveted positions in the House, prominent figures are soon to leave. House Appropriations Committee Chair Kay Granger, R‑Texas, is quitting her committee post and not seeking reelection. Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R‑Washington, chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, is hanging it up. So is Representative Patrick McHenry, R‑North Carolina, chair of the House Financial Services Committee.
Gallagher, 39, is already a four-term veteran and chair of the House Select Committee on Communist China. He had just steered passage of legislation to force ByteDance to divest TikTok.
He said little about leaving early, only that he’s doing so “after conversations with my family.” Under Wisconsin law, his seat will not be filled until the November election.
Once known for bloody leadership wars, House Democrats voted with near unity under Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi and — with a thin majority — succeeded in passing major legislation such as the American Rescue Act and the Inflation Reduction Act in the first two years of the Biden-Harris administration.
The unity has continued under Representative Hakeem Jeffries, D‑New York, picked unanimously as Pelosi’s successor as Democratic leader.
By contrast, on Friday, 100 House Republicans supported the big appropriations bill while 109 opposed it. One “nay” vote came from Cathy McMorris Rodgers.
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