Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN ARSONISTS ARE NOT GOING AWAY

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WASHINGTON — It wasn’t planned, but it was appropriat­e that President Biden’s speech last Thursday on the dangers facing American democracy was delivered as the federal government seemed on the verge of a shutdown, thanks to right-wing House Republican­s refusing to let the majority work its will.

Democracy is in trouble not just because of Donald Trump but also because of dysfunctio­ns created by the insistence of a far-right minority to rule at all costs. The extremists’ contempt for the wishes of the majority explains why they revere Trump’s eagerness to subvert free elections and why they were willing to burden military personnel and civil servants with the cost of a shutdown.

Biden’s speech might not have been why House Speaker Kevin McCarthy pulled back from the brink on Saturday. But the Republican leader clearly understood that blame for the fiasco would have fallen on him, given the failure of his earlier strategy rooted in coddling the Trumpists in his caucus.

So he finally did what Democrats had long been urging him to do: He abandoned his Republican­s-only approach involving sweeping budget cuts that were still not sufficient for his most radical colleagues. He surprised nearly everyone in the Capitol by moving a continuing resolution that required Democratic support to keep the government funded for another 45 days while budget negotiatio­ns continue.

One of Winston Churchill’s most cited observatio­ns is that Americans always do the right thing after exhausting all of the other possibilit­ies. McCarthy doesn’t always do the right thing, but he did so in this case — after he tried almost everything else.

If anyone doubts which party is extreme and which favors bipartisan accord, the roll call on McCarthy’s resolution provided a resounding data point. Even as their party’s speaker sought the two-thirds majority he needed in this last-minute process, only 126 Republican­s voted with him; 90 voted no. Among Democrats, the vote was 209-1.

“Time and time and time again, Democrats have had to come to the rescue,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said at a news conference after the vote.

At his own news conference, McCarthy took a partisan line, assailing Biden and making a point of welcoming members who had opposed him back into the fold.

None of which bodes well for the next 45 days, and not just because some way must be found to finance aid to Ukraine, left out of the resolution. Democrats remain angry that McCarthy broke the deal he reached with Biden earlier this year during debt ceiling negotiatio­ns. That deal, too, was passed with more Democratic than Republican votes.

McCarthy abandoned the agreement with Biden out of fear he’d be shoved out of his job by the far right. On Saturday, he put on a brave face, saying he’d gladly face a challenge if that were the cost of being “the adult in the room.”

It could come in the next few days. On CNN Sunday, leading House zealot Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., said he would propose a motion to remove McCarthy. “The only way Kevin McCarthy is speaker of the House at the end of this coming week is if Democrats bail him out,” Gaetz said. But rescuing McCarthy will be a reach for many Democrats.

“There is no trust in the House Democratic caucus when it comes to Kevin McCarthy,” Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., told me, “and in order to have any deal, a critical element is trust.”

It’s notable that Biden gave his democracy speech in Arizona in honor of the late Sen. John McCain, a Republican who always defended the idea of putting country over party. Biden spoke of the danger posed by those who would “shut down the government” and “burn the place down.”

On Saturday, enough House Republican­s joined their party colleagues in the Senate and Democrats to keep the arsonists at bay. Given Trump’s hold on the party, alas, there are few signs that this will become a habit.

 ?? ?? E.J. Dionne
E.J. Dionne

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