Permanent musical accompaniment, Burning Down the House by the Talking Heads.
Kevin McCarthy reminds me of Wile E. Coyote – how many times does this fool have to fail before he realizes that he is never going to capture his elusive goal? Apparently he is going to need a few more anvils dropped on his head today.
The GQP House Fascist Caucus of insurrectionists, internet trolls and far right influencers (grifters) are never going to vote for him unless he agrees to put these bottom-feeding sewer dwellers in charge of the House, in which case he is a Speaker in name only and without any real power. The lunatics would be in charge of the insane asylum. For someone who is only interested in obtaining power, what would be the point? It would be a pyrrhic victory, and a disaster for the nation.
These nihilists are not interested in governing. They only care about their brand which allows them to grift off the right-wing rubes. This is a clusterfuck of crazy and chaos. The GQP is totally dysfunctional and not a serious governing party. This is a sequel to their seditious insurrection on January 6, 2021, for which the Department of Justice has been too slow in holding them accountable.
POLITICO Playbook: Inside McCarthy’s brewing speaker deal:
After spending the last 48 hours on life support, KEVIN McCARTHY’s bid for the speakership is seeing a potential revival.
Following a rollercoaster of a Wednesday during which the California Republican failed three more times to secure the 218 votes for the gavel, McCarthy and some of his critics finally got in a room and had what both sides are describing as productive conversations.
This morning, after slamming coffee at midnight and working the phones until the wee hours, we have a readout of new concessions McCarthy has offered his critics and where things stand.
NEW CONCESSIONS ON THE TABLE: Here’s what’s being discussed, according to one well-placed source familiar with these talks. And, keep in mind, negotiations are ongoing and fluid:
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- A one-member “motion to vacate”: The GOP leader appears to have finally acquiesced to a demand to lower the threshold needed to force a vote ousting a speaker to just one member. While McCarthy originally indicated that restoring the one-member “motion to vacate” was a red line, his allies now argue that there’s not a huge practical difference between this and his previous offer of requiring five members to trigger the vote.
- Rules Committee seats for the Freedom Caucus: McCarthy is prepared to give the House Freedom Caucus two seats on the powerful House Rules Committee, which oversees the amendment process for the floor. (Some conservatives are still holding out for four seats on the panel.) There are also talks about giving a third seat to a conservative close to the Freedom Caucus but not in it — someone like Reps. THOMAS MASSIE (R-Ky.). Who will pick those members? We’re told there is ongoing haggling. Typically, it’s the speaker’s prerogative, but conservatives want to choose their own members for these jobs.
- A vote on term limits: This is a key demand of Rep. RALPH NORMAN(R-S.C.), who has proposed a constitutional amendment limiting lawmakers to three terms in the House.
- Major changes to the appropriations process: Fears of another trillion-plus-dollar omnibus spending bill have been a major driver of the conservative backlash to McCarthy. The brewing deal includes a promise for standalone votes on each of the 12 yearly appropriations bills, which would be considered under what is known as an “open rule,” allowing floor amendments to be offered by any lawmaker. Conservatives also won a concession to carve out any earmarks included in those packages for separate votes, though it’s unclear if they’d be voted on as one package or separately.
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The late-night exchange of paper followed anothermajor breakthrough for the GOP leader: The McCarthy-aligned Congressional Leadership Fund reached a deal with the conservative Club for Growth, which had initially signaled opposition to a Speaker McCarthy, to stay out of open House primaries for safe Republican seats. In the past, the two groups often found themselves at war with each other, with CLF pouring in millions to back establishment candidates while the Club endorsed those on the far right. In return for that promise, the Club has dropped its opposition to McCarthy.
THE MILLION-DOLLAR QUESTION: Will this be enough to land McCarthy the speakership? That’s TBD.
Rep. CHIP ROY (R-Texas) — who following a feisty Tuesday night TV exchange with Fox News’ LAURA INGRAHAM played a major role getting talks moving on Wednesday — indicated to GOP leaders that he could bring along as many as 10 McCarthy detractors, according to CNN’s Mel Zanona, and possibly even convince others to vote “present.” That won’t get him to 218, but McCarthy’s camp hopes it might just provide a final boost allowing him to close the gap after a hellish two days.
Still, even McCarthy’s closest allies say this isn’t over just yet.
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- One GOP leadership source told us they believe there are still five “hard nos” against him — Reps. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.), LAUREN BOEBERT (R-Colo.), ANDY BIGGS (R-Ariz.), BOB GOOD (R-Va.) and MATT ROSENDALE (R-Mont.). Reminder: He can only lose four.
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- As he left the Capitol Wednesday night, Rep. Norman told reporters he hadn’t changed his position on opposing McCarthy. But the terms of this possible deal were still being ironed out at that point, and the nod to his own term-limits proposal might well change things.
- McCarthy allies are also worried about freshman Rep. ELI CRANE (R-Ariz.), who we hear has shown no indication of moving.
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As of 1 a.m., the thinking in McCarthy’s camp was that if they can winnow down his opposition from 20 to a half-dozen or so, the pressure on the remaining holdouts will be so great that enough will cave.
However, one McCarthy ally cautioned us that the situation could “get worse before it gets better.” There’s an expectation that McCarthy could actually lose a handful of votes from exasperated members if balloting continues today.
Meanwhile, time is running out as some McCarthy backers frustrated by the stalemate eye an exit strategy. Rep. PETE SESSIONS (R-Texas), a former Rules Committee chairman long considered an ally of GOP leadership, insisted on CNN last night that members should start discussing other potential speaker candidates, such as incoming House Majority Leader STEVE SCALISE (R-La.). “I’m telling you these 19 people are dug in,” he said of McCarthy’s foes, suggesting Republicans could only realistically tolerate about “three or four more rounds” of voting.
BUT BUT BUT … We’re told the wheeling and dealing probably isn’t over and may take a few days to nail down. “I still don’t see this getting resolved in the near term. Maybe more likely over the weekend and into next week,” cautioned one GOP lawmaker.
McCarthy’s camp also expects that he may eventually have to endorse conservatives for committee gavels, such as Rep. ANDY HARRIS (R-Md.), who’s pushing to lead the Health and Human Services subcommittee on Appropriations, or Rep. MARK GREEN (R-Tenn.), who’s gunning to lead the Committee on Homeland Security. (Those decisions are subject to the approval of the GOP steering committee, though McCarthy’s influence is significant.)
If the horsetrading goes that far, it’s bound to piss off many House Republicans who have been team players and supported McCarthy all along. Rep. DAN CRENSHAW (R-Texas), for example, also wants the Homeland Security gavel. But if push comes to shove, McCarthy may well sacrifice his backers’ ambitions to realize his own speakership dream.
That won’t sit well with centrists or even mainstream conservatives,who will no doubt argue that McCarthy is rewarding bad behavior. One senior Republican aide complained to us on Wednesday night that McCarthy’s concessions would undercut the party in the long run.
“He’s essentially given away all the power of the speakership. He’s making it to where these Freedom Caucus guys can stop anything they want,” the aide told us. “It’s a vanity project. This majority is going to be miserable. It’s just absurd what he’s given away to these guys just to be speaker when I’m sure there’s somebody in this conference that the Freedom Caucus would have accepted as speaker and not demanded all of these crazy changes.”
Meanwhile, there’s one wild card that has McCarthy’s camp more worried: “I think Gaetz and other [‘Never Kevin’ lawmakers] are going to blow this up,” one top McCarthy confidant told us last night. Indeed, on Wednesday night, Gaetz crashed negotiating sessions he was not invited to, per our colleague Olivia Beavers. Expect him to continue to stir the pot.
SO WHAT’S THE PLAN TODAY? The rebels and McCarthy and his whip team are slated to talk early this morning, after conservatives have had time to mull over his latest offers and scrutinize them on paper. The House will gavel in at noon to continue voting on the speakership. There’s been some talk about adjourning to continue negotiations, though they’d have to get a majority to do so.
Some have even floated postponing votes until next week — though others in the party have pushed back on that idea. “The optics of us leaving without a speaker would be really bad,” the Republican lawmaker mentioned above told us last night, arguing that constituents are blowing up their phones telling them to get their act together.
HOW WE GOT HERE: The potential breakthrough came at the end of what began as an abysmal day for McCarthy, with his speakership dreams seeming almost dead. Rep. VICTORIA SPARTZ (R-Ind.), who had previously supported McCarthy through multiple ballots, voted “present,” suggesting McCarthy was bleeding support.
Then Rep. KEN BUCK (R-Colo.), another McCarthy backer in the Freedom Caucus, set McCarthy allies scrambling after he told us off the chamber floor that the GOP leader needed to make a deal that day — or step aside and let someone like Scalise have a go. Within an hour, as he went on CNN to repeat those words, we spotted incoming Chief Deputy Whip GUY RESCHENTHALER (R-Pa.) standing off camera, waiting to corner Buck and try to muscle him back in line.
On the chamber floor, McCarthy’s whip team went to work, feverishly trying to win over some of his 20 detractors — and to discern which of them could still be won over with concessions. McCarthy also spent the evening meeting with freshman opponents who don’t have much of a relationship with him.
The chaotic scene underscored the absurdity of the entire situation. Republicans cheered when they got the votes to adjourn for the night, celebrating as if they’d just passed a massive tax cut deal when they were simply leaving once again without a speaker.
Buck at one point floated — quite seriously, in fact — that members host a meeting with booze, suggesting it might help move talks along. Upon entering a meeting, incoming NRCC Chairman RICHARD HUDSON (R-N.C.) joked that his water bottle was actually full of vodka. Down the hall, former Michigan Rep. JUSTIN AMASH nerded out about how great the standoff was, mused over how he wished it had occurred when he was in Congress — then pitched himself for speaker. Rep. JEFF VAN DREW, a petite former dentist from New Jersey often seen in pinstriped suits, argued that absent any agreement, the party’s leaders should “get everybody back in the caucus room and start beating the daylights out of each other until we get something.”
Expect just as much crazy today.
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They’re at it again right now.
Last night Lauren Boebert herself was on the TV explaining what’s going on with her people (the MAGAs) to Stephanie Ruhle on MSNBC.
Well, Ms. Boebert explained that these discussions with Kevin McCarthy started last summer but KM was expecting a Big Red Wave and didn’t think he needed the MAGAs. Well, there was no Big Red Wave and now he needs them.
The only interesting point made by Ms. Boebert is that she thinks of this as a negotiation process. “It’s only been two days,” she said. “We have to get the Speaker right” because “we have to get to work and help the American people” who apparently are suffering from “years of Democratic policy failures.”
If the GOP was a sane party, this would just be part of the messiness that is American Democracy.
And that’s a beautiful thing.
But these are MAGAt freaks taking the people who allowed them to fester as hostages.
Which is poetic but not beautiful.
The MAGAts are demanding minority rule, and the pathetic losers like McCarthy who enabled them are threatening to primary them with GOP PAC money.
That’s way beyond asking for a committee chair or a corner office.
The GQP is a sewer.
Two years of this should work out for the Dems in 2024 if they just act like Dems.
But what do I know? I’m a socialist demon-rat Marxist commie gun grabber mask mandating vaccinated soy boy or something.