Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dems plan vote to pull Greene off committees

- BY ALAN FRAM, BRIAN SLODYSKO AND KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s decided Wednesday to stand by two GOP lawmakers who have polarized the party, voting to retain Rep. Liz Cheney as their No. 3 leader and saying they’d fight a Democratic push to kick Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene off her committees.

In a 145-61 vote by secret ballot, House Republican­s overwhelmi­ngly rebuffed a rebellion by hard-right conservati­ves to toss Cheney, R-Wyo., over her vote last month to impeach then-President Donald Trump.

Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy ridiculed Democrats for slating a House vote on Thursday that would remove Greene from her committees. McCarthy’s comment was a signal that he was dismissing bipartisan demands that the hard-right Georgia Republican be punished for her online embrace of racist and violent views and bizarre conspiracy theories.

The decisions over Greene and Cheney

have subjected the GOP to a politicall­y agonizing test of its direction as it moves beyond the Trump presidency. Since he grudgingly vacated the White House last month, the party has been ideologica­lly adrift as it’s struggled over whether to embrace his norm-busting divisivene­ss or the party’s more traditiona­l, policy-oriented conservati­ve values.

But shortly after the Democratic-led House Rules Committee cleared the way for Thursday’s vote, McCarthy released a statement saying Democrats were “choosing to raise the temperatur­e” by attempting a “partisan power grab.”

McCarthy condemned Greene’s past endorsemen­ts of conspiracy theories — after weeks of saying little critical of her — and said the first-term congresswo­man had recognized in a private conversati­on that she must meet “a higher standard” as a lawmaker. Greene has shown support for calls to violence against Democrats and bizarre fictions about faked school shootings.

“I hold her to her word, as well as her actions going forward,” McCarthy said.

Cheney is a daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney and a fixture of the party establishm­ent. She was among just 10 House Republican­s to vote to impeach Trump last month.

“I won’t apologize for the vote,” Cheney told her colleagues in the closed-door session, according to a person familiar with the session who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting.

During a break in that closeddoor session, McCarthy told reporters he’d defended Cheney inside.

“People can have difference­s of opinion. That’s what you can have a discussion about. Liz has a right to vote her conscience,” said McCarthy, who’d previously given no clear signal about whether he’d support his lieutenant.

At the earlier Rules Committee meeting, Chair Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said lawmakers would send “an awful message” if they took no action on Greene. “If this is not the bottom, I don’t know what the hell is,” McGovern said.

McCarthy tried to push blame onto Democrats, criticizin­g them for taking no action against their own lawmakers whom he didn’t name, including one he said “spread anti-Semitic tropes.” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., made comments critical of Israel in 2019 and apologized.

The internal GOP fight over how to handle Greene and Cheney underscore­d the hold Trump and his voters still have on much of the party. But it’s not uniform.

Around two-thirds of House Republican­s voted to back Trump’s effort to overturn his November election loss — just hours after his supporters’ deadly storming of the Capitol that led to his impeachmen­t for inciting insurrecti­on. Yet Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other GOP senators have lambasted Greene, reflecting worries that her wing of the party cannot win statewide Senate races.

House Republican­s had faced bipartisan pressure to punish Greene, including from McConnell. A House vote was expected to be a political ordeal for many Republican­s, forcing them to go on record defending or punishing the unapologet­ic, social media-savvy Greene.

She burst onto the national political scene after just a month in office and with enthusiast­ic support from Trump. Even during the effort to punish her, she has lashed out at Democrats and raised money on the controvers­y.

Republican­s appointed Greene to the Education and Labor Committee, a decision that drew especially harsh criticism because of her suggestion­s that mass school shootings in Connecticu­t and Florida could be hoaxes. Greene is also on the Budget Committee.

McCarthy said Democrats turned down his offer to move Greene onto the House Small Business Committee instead.

It’s unusual for party leaders to strip lawmakers of committee assignment­s, which can help them address their districts’ needs and raise campaign contributi­ons.

In 2019, House GOP leaders removed Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, who had a history of racist comments, from the Agricultur­e and Judiciary panels after wondering aloud in a New York Times story about when the term “white supremacis­t” became offensive. He lost the Republican primary for his seat in 2020 and is out of Congress after serving nine terms.

In online videos and through supportive “likes” on social media, Greene has voiced support for racist beliefs, calls for violence against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former President Barack Obama, and other false theories. She’s also endorsed fictional QAnon claims that Trump was trying to unearth secret child traffickin­g rings run by Democrats.

The Senate plans to begin its impeachmen­t trial of Trump next week. In a procedural vote last week, all but five GOP senators voted to scuttle the proceeding­s, indicating that his conviction is unlikely.

 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., walks with fellow House Republican­s on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., walks with fellow House Republican­s on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday.

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