Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gaetz, Greene a challenge for House GOP

- BY ALAN FRAM AND BRIAN SLODYSKO

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal leaders have always faced rebels in their ranks. But Reps. Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene are presenting top House Republican­s with a test of how to handle a new breed of Trump-era, social media-savvy firebrands.

Gaetz, a third-term Floridian, and Greene, a Northwest Georgia freshman, have attracted more public attention lately than most junior members of Congress. Much of it hasn’t been positive.

That’s confrontin­g House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., with questions about whether the two hardright provocateu­rs might hurt the GOP’s goal of capturing House control in next year’s elections. Party leaders must decide what, if anything, to do about them, and what impact any action would have on their supporters, who come from the GOP’s staunchly conservati­ve base.

“These are folks who operate in their own bubbles,” said former Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., who headed the House GOP’s campaign operation. “They know how to get press. They don’t worry about being too outrageous.

“They have absolutely safe seats,” Davis said.

The Justice Department is investigat­ing whether Gaetz violated sex traffickin­g laws and had sex with a 17-year-old girl, and McCarthy has suggested he’ll take action if Gaetz is indicted.

Gaetz has denied the accusation­s against him, which were described by people familiar with the investigat­ion. He hasn’t been charged with any crimes and says he is “absolutely not resigning.”

As for Greene, a memo linked to her last week described a proposed America First Caucus hailing “Anglo-Saxon political traditions” and warning of immigratio­n’s threat to the U.S.’s “unique culture,” prompting McCarthy to denounce “nativist dog whistles.”

Greene calls the memo a staff-level proposal she’d not read from an outside group she didn’t identify. She says America First embraces people “of every race, creed, and color,” and adds, “I will never back down.”

Gaetz said on Twitter that he is proud to join Greene in the America First Caucus.

“We will end wars, stop illegal immigratio­n & promote trade that is fair to American workers,” he tweeted.

Unlike most lawmakers, the two have sources of power that make them tough for leaders to curb. Their formulas include raising lots of money, amassing social media followers and appearing often on television; representi­ng strongly conservati­ve districts and being allied with former President Donald Trump, who’s still idolized by legions of Republican­s.

Their associatio­n with Trump “gives a lot of psychologi­cal power to the firebrands to know that they’re on pretty safe ground,” said former Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., a hardline conservati­ve who battled party leaders.

“In the past, if you wanted your profile as elevated as Matt Gaetz’s or Marjorie Taylor Greene’s, you’d run for president,” said Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., another conservati­ve who’s clashed with leadership.

From January 2019 through last week, Gaetz’s 209 weekday appearance­s on the three major cable TV networks — nearly all on conservati­ve Fox News — were exceeded by only five other members of Congress, according to Media Matters, a liberal group that monitors online political activity. His congressio­nal and personal Twitter accounts both boast at least 1 million followers.

“The really powerful people in this town are the ones that can go on television and make an argument,” Gaetz told the producers of “The Swamp,” a 2019 HBO-sponsored documentar­y. “And that’s power that leadership can never take away from you.”

Greene, in Congress since January, has 400,000 Twitter followers but has made no daytime appearance­s on the three top cable networks. She has appeared on the Trump-friendly One America News Network and Newsmax TV.

She also reported raising $3.2 million during this year’s first three months. That’s more than double the $1.5 million the typical House GOP incumbent spent on their entire 2020 reelection, according to Federal Election Commission figures.

Gaetz reported raising $1.8 million through March.

“Celebrity fuels moneyraisi­ng ability and popularity, and that is independen­t from the traditiona­l power structure” in Congress, said Michael Steel, former top aide to former Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and other leading Republican­s.

The allegation­s against Gaetz, part of a broader probe of Florida Republican political figures, are serious enough to potentiall­y threaten his political survival, whatever McCarthy does.

Internal House GOP rules say a lawmaker indicted for a serious felony should resign from committees, while House rules say they shouldn’t vote on the chamber’s floor if convicted. Members in such situations often resign or don’t seek reelection.

Greene’s situation is murkier. In a recent case, after years of racially offensive statements by Iowa Rep. Steve King, GOP leaders turned against him in 2019 when he questioned why terms like “white supremacis­t” were offensive. He didn’t resign but lost his 2020 GOP primary.

Over GOP objections, the Democratic-majority House stripped Greene of her committee assignment­s in February for her online recycling of violent statements against Democrats and espousing conspiracy theories such as the idea that high-profile school shootings were “false flag” operations set up to spark support for gun control. McCarthy denounced her statements but didn’t punish her.

“It’s a problem,” said Sarah Chamberlai­n, who heads the Republican Main Street Partnershi­p, an alliance of dozens of GOP centrists. “If Matt Gaetz becomes the face of the Republican Party, he can be used against us” by Democratic ads in moderate GOP districts, she said.

Usually, congressio­nal leaders can pressure lawmakers by threatenin­g to cut campaign contributi­ons the parties control. Gaetz and Greene have already raised enough money to resist such pressure.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene
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Matt Gaetz

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