Los Angeles Times

Hoping to ride Trump’s coattails to power

McCarthy walks a tightrope in trying to unite a fractious GOP coalition and become House speaker.

- By Jennifer Haberkorn and Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — When Donald Trump won the GOP’s 2016 presidenti­al nomination, most Republican­s kept him at arm’s length. Bakersfiel­d Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy did what had worked for him for years, first in Sacramento and then in Washington: acharm offensive.

The House minority leader’s trademark affability — he has a mental Rolodex of politician­s’ favorite snacks, hometowns and kids’ names — and his abrupt pivot to become Trump’s most loyal ally in the House earned him the new president’s nickname, “My Kevin.”

Now McCarthy sees a chance to ride that relationsh­ip with Trump into the House majority and a job he’s coveted for years: speaker.

But California’s most powerful Republican is charting a starkly different path to the 2022 midterm election than some other senior Republican­s who want to make a clean break with the unpredicta­ble Trump and reclaim their party from those who back far-right conspiracy theories, such as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Instead of cutting anyone out, McCarthy is trying to keep everyone in. He’s maintainin­g ties with Trump and took no punitive actions against Greene, while simultaneo­usly defending GOP leaders such as Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who voted to impeach Trump.

But success may depend on whether that likability and ability to read his members can prevent what McCarthy has termed the GOP’s “big tent” from turning into a circus.

“What we see McCarthy doing is trying to hold together a coalition that maybe can’t be held together,” said Rob Stutzman, who was a senior advisor to moderate GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger when McCarthy first rose to prominence in California politics as the first freshman elected minority leader in the Assembly. “The question is, where do you draw the line? ... Will history reflect better on those who decided not to stay in the game?”

McCarthy stumbled a bit in recent weeks as he tried to keep his party united after the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on by Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol. At first McCarthy offered a rare criticism of Trump for failing to stem the violence, but then McCarthy quickly backed down. Such contortion­s are familiar to those who have crossed into McCarthy’s orbit over his two decades in politics, though the stakes today are higher.

“Kevin knows how dangerous this is,” said Mike Madrid, a longtime GOP strategist in California and a leader of the small faction working to expel Trumpism from the party. “He is fomenting the barbarians at the gate until they are literally breaking down the House doors. Yet he still can’t muster the strength to lead the Republican Party in a different direction.”

The willingnes­s to do whatever it takes to nudge Democrats out of control has turned McCarthy into a politician ideologica­lly unrecogniz­able from his early days as a rising GOP star. As chair of the national Young Republican­s and later a staffer for former Rep. Bill Thomas of Bakersfiel­d, McCarthy did battle with the party’s right wing, aligning with moderates eager to keep the focus on economics and not culture wars.

When Thomas retired in 2006 and McCarthy successful­ly ran for his mentor’s seat, the two politician­s were so in sync that it seemed as much a coronation as an election. Now Thomas talks about McCarthy as someone who has lost his way, pointing to his quick retreat from the initial statement that Trump bore blame for the riot.

Thomas said in a January interview on KGET-TV in Bakersfiel­d that he hopes that, going forward, the courage McCarthy initially expressed “will be the Kevin leading the Republican­s on the floor of the House, and not the ‘My Kevin,’ as he had been, supporting, nurturing the lies of the president about what happened.”

Some Republican­s have already cut those ties with the president. Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell formed an alliance with Trump during his presidency in order to enact a Republican tax bill and install conservati­ves on the courts. After the insurrecti­on, McConnell did not vote to convict Trump in his impeachmen­t trial, but issued a scorching speech about Trump’s lies that the election was stolen and the former president’s role in provoking the insurrecti­on.

A handful of House Republican­s have issued a similar call, including Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and Cheney, who serves as the No. 3 leader in the House. A group of rank-and-file Republican­s tried to force Cheney out of her leadership post, but it was quelled in part because McCarthy made a case to keep Cheney in the role.

McConnell (R-Ky.) has drawn a clear line in how far he is willing to go to placate the ascendant Trump wing of the party, a move that McCarthy is refusing to replicate.

Shortly after Trump left office, McCarthy hustled to Mar-a-Lago in Florida to ask Trump to help House Republican­s in their quest to retake the majority in 2022.

When asked by a reporter Wednesday whether Trump should have a speaking slot at CPAC, the conservati­ve conference going on this weekend, McCarthy quickly said yes.

But even inside the big tent, the fissures are obvious. At the same news briefing, Cheney said she doesn’t believe Trump should be given the prominent perch.

As she spoke, Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), the secondrank­ing Republican, subtly shook his head ‘no,’ signaling disagreeme­nt with Cheney. In his characteri­stic style, McCarthy tried to displace the tension, joking he would end the news conference “on that high note.”

Refusing to jettison Trump may ultimately benefit McCarthy. Republican voters and the majority of the Republican conference support him. The former president helped House Republican­s defy prediction­s that the GOP would lose upward of a dozen House seats in the November election. Instead, every incumbent Republican on the ballot was reelected and the party narrowed the House margin to 10 seats, including four pickups in California.

“The reward structure hasn’t changed with Trump’s loss. If Republican­s had lost eight to 12 seats, as a lot of people thought, that might have changed things,” said Doug Heye, a former Republican National Committee spokesman and longtime party operative who has distanced himself from Trump. “That makes it harder, as McConnell wants to do, to put Trump in the rear view.”

Even some moderate Republican­s see McCarthy as their best hope at wresting control of the House from the Democrats at this contentiou­s moment.

“I think Kevin is correctly focused on the 2022 elections,” said Jim Brulte, former chair of the California Republican Party. “So we have a backstop against a president who himself campaigned saying, ‘I will have the most progressiv­e administra­tion in American history.’ ”

In McCarthy’s home base of Kern County, Republican­s say they’re grateful their member of Congress has the ear of the former president — a relationsh­ip they think is worth maintainin­g now that Trump is out of office, even with the downsides.

“What’s the alternativ­e? Should he have no relationsh­ip with President Trump? Should he have had no window through which he can call and persuade the president of this, that or the other thing? But it’s a doubleedge­d sword, and you can’t control what former President Trump says or does,” said Mike Maggard, a Republican and a Kern County supervisor who ran in a primary against McCarthy for an Assembly seat nearly two decades ago. “I recognize it and so do many of my Republican friends here. That’s a very complicate­d relationsh­ip.”

McCarthy now is trying to steer Republican­s to reclaim the majority by highlighti­ng what they see as the policy problems in the Democrats’ agenda, such as their $1.9-trillion COVID-19 relief bill, and relabeling the GOP the party of the American worker.

“You’re going to see House Republican­s not only bringing to the surface the bad policies that will set the country backward, but also what we’re for, what our agenda is, just as we did with the ‘Commitment to America’ last year, which led us to grow the coalition” in November, said McCarthy spokesman Matt Sparks.

Pollster Frank Luntz, a longtime Republican who recently separated from the party, has known McCarthy since the congressma­n was an organizer with the Young Republican­s in the early 1990s.

He said he’s not surprised to see McCarthy going down the path he’s taken over the tumultuous last couple of months.

“I don’t agree with everything he says and does, but he’s got an incredible track record of making things work out,” Luntz said. “That is why he’s survived. He listens better than most leaders. And he learns faster. That allows him to survive when others will fall by the wayside.”

‘What we see McCarthy doing is trying to hold together a coalition that maybe can’t be held together.’ — Rob Stutzman,

former advisor to Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger

 ?? David McNew Getty Images ?? HOUSE Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy with President Trump at a rally in Bakersfiel­d last year. McCarthy embraced Trump so readily during his presidency that Trump nicknamed him “My Kevin.”
David McNew Getty Images HOUSE Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy with President Trump at a rally in Bakersfiel­d last year. McCarthy embraced Trump so readily during his presidency that Trump nicknamed him “My Kevin.”

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