Chattanooga Times Free Press

REALITY VS. CHAOS IN THE GOP

- Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

In an interview with Politico, former Republican Rep. John Katko described the damage to his party since Speaker Kevin McCarthy was deposed more than three weeks ago: “The chaos that’s ensued has really illuminate­d the divisions in the party. Not only has it illuminate­d them, it’s kind of deepened and hardened those divisions.”

After cannibaliz­ing three possible successors to McCarthy, an exhausted and exasperate­d group of House Republican­s finally settled on Rep. Mike Johnson, an obscure 51-yearold lawmaker from Louisiana whose main virtue seems to be an absence of enemies. But this thin veneer of unity cannot hide the dysfunctio­n and disarray that Katko describes.

“It’s a pretty sad commentary on governance right now,” Rep. Steve Womack, an Arkansas Republican, told reporters. “The American public cannot be looking at this and having any reasonable confidence that this conference can be governed. It’s sad. I’m sad. I’m heartbroke­n.”

There are many reasons and rivalries fragmentin­g the Republican­s today, but they can essentiall­y be divided into two main factions: the Reality Caucus and the Chaos Caucus.

This division is often — and erroneousl­y — described as moderates vs. conservati­ves. In fact, almost all of them are conservati­ves, since moderates are practicall­y extinct in the modern GOP. What really distinguis­hes the two caucuses is their philosophy of governing — why they came to Congress in the first place.

Members of the Reality Caucus take a pragmatic approach to their jobs. They understand that America is a vast country containing huge difference­s — geographic, economic, social, racial, religious, ethnic — and the only way it can be ruled effectivel­y is if lawmakers respect and accommodat­e those difference­s and see compromise as an essential element of the legislativ­e process, not an act of betrayal.

They accept the reality that Donald Trump lost the last election, and sided with Vice President Mike Pence in voting to uphold the results. They recognize that Democrats control the Senate and the White House, and that they must negotiate with those power centers. When the Treasury almost ran out of borrowing authority last spring, 149 members of the Reality Caucus backed a bipartisan compromise to protect America’s economic reputation. When the federal government was about to run out of money last month, 126 GOP realists supported a bill that kept the doors open.

The Chaos Caucus takes a very different approach. They are performers, not legislator­s; speech-makers, not deal-makers. Their primary goal is ideologica­l purity, not practical accomplish­ment; disruption, not progress. Their loyalty is to a person, Donald Trump.

They come from totally safe districts, and have no fear of political accountabi­lity. They are bolstered by right-wing broadcast outlets and social media channels that give them direct access to political soulmates and campaign contributo­rs.

Their true colors have been on full display during the speaker fiasco. Eight members of the Chaos Caucus voted to eject McCarthy.

Then the Chaos Caucus backed one of their own for speaker, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio.

The Realists rallied to block Jordan, but when they nominated Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota for the top job, he was torpedoed by the Chaosists.

Trump is a hero to the Chaos Caucus. The former president demands total fealty, and anyone who strays from the True Path of MAGA Nation is branded a heretic. Trump is a demolition expert whose specialty is blowing up alliances with anyone who doesn’t wear a red hat and kiss his ring.

Mike Johnson, the new speaker, has promised to run the House “like a welloiled machine,” but there is only one way to do that. He must choose reality over ideology; facts over fantasy; compromise over chaos.

 ?? ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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