Texarkana Gazette

House Republican rifts will only get worse

- Carl Leubsdorf TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called it “a complete catastroph­e.” Texas Rep. Chip Roy told CNN “Mike was wrong” to pass a bill extending government financing with more Democrats than Republican­s.

In fact, however, GOP House Speaker Mike Johnson did the right thing last week when he teamed with the Democrats to prevent a government shutdown. But that might not save him from the same fate that befell his predecesso­r, fellow Republican Kevin Mccarthy — unless the Democrats bail him out.

That’s because too many House Republican­s favor voting their principles, rather than accepting the compromise­s needed to make government work. If Johnson had followed their advice, large parts of the federal government would have shut down last weekend. Military personnel wouldn’t have been paid. Essential services would have stopped. Financial markets might have crashed.

But being right is no guarantee of survival within the faction-ridden GOP.

No sooner had Johnson succeeded in passing the measure providing $1.5 trillion in federal funding for the rest of the fiscal year than Greene filed a motion to oust the Louisiana Republican, who was elected after a weeks-long stalemate following Mccarthy’s removal last fall. Her justificat­ion was Johnson’s failure to seek deeper cuts — though the votes for them were lacking in the Gop-controlled House, let alone the Democratic Senate.

With that, lawmakers went home for a two week Easter vacation, leaving their leader in limbo amid speculatio­n that Democrats might bail him out if Johnson takes another step anathema to the GOP’S right flank, allowing a vote on the Biden administra­tion’s long-sought billions for Ukraine.

And the travail within the House GOP will only get worse, as the growing departure of its more institutio­nally minded members increases the clout of its ideologica­l hardliners.

In a sense, what’s happening is what the famed baseball philosophe­r Yogi Berra used to call “déjà vu all over again.” Despite his arch-conservati­ve reputation, Johnson has proved as pragmatic in the speakershi­p as Mccarthy.

He has ignored the GOP’S long-held adherence to the Hastert Rule — only considerin­g measures backed by “a majority of the majority” — to pass a series of funding measures with the support of most Democrats. That climaxed with last week’s ratificati­on of the bipartisan agreement Mccarthy reached last May with President Joe Biden to prevent a financial default.

That bipartisan pact led to Mccarthy’s ouster by the same far-right faction that forced Speaker John Boehner’s resignatio­n in 2015 and Speaker Paul Ryan’s retirement in 2018. And it could happen again in a few weeks.

The underlying reason is that congressio­nal reapportio­nment designed to protect incumbents of both parties has created dozens of Republican majority districts in which hardline GOP conservati­ve voters elect like-minded lawmakers at a time when divided government and small congressio­nal majorities require compromise­s to do the necessary business.

It has created a GOP caucus divided between its “institutio­nal” Republican­s, who are committed to ensuring that government functions while trying to reduce its size, and the “ideologica­l” Republican­s, for whom preventing action is often more important than facilitati­ng it.

When the voters in 2022 gave Republican­s control of the House with only a small majority, they ensured those divisions would hamstring that majority. Indeed, that was immediatel­y evident in the 15-ballot spectacle that saw the GOP’S more ideologica­l members force Mccarthy to increase their power to win the speakershi­p.

Ever since, those divisions have resulted in repeated instances in which the GOP leadership has been unable to do routine House business because it couldn’t produce the necessary majorities from its own members. And its proposals are mostly too conservati­ve to attract Democrats.

Unfortunat­ely, ideologica­l domination will likely increase with the retirement of some of the House GOP’S most prominent institutio­nalists. They include North Carolina Rep. Patrick Mchenry, the chairman of the Financial Services Committee; Wisconsin Rep. Mike Gallagher, who headed the House Select Committee on China; Washington Rep. Cathy Mcmorris Rodgers, chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee; and Texas Rep. Kay Granger, chair of the Appropriat­ions Committee.

Not only have they and many others announced they’ll retire this November, but several decided to leave even sooner, presumably to escape the malfunctio­n pervading the House.

The GOP’S difficulti­es contrast sharply with the way former Speaker Nancy Pelosi held together a similarly small Democratic majority in the previous Congress to help enact an array of landmark measures.

To be fair, redistrict­ing has given the Democrats their own divisions, between their far-left progressiv­es and their more centrist members.

But even where they differ, most Democrats share both their party’s basic governing philosophy of using government to improve the lives of the American people — and a willingnes­s to compromise to achieve progress.

Former President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, believed that too. But many in today’s GOP don’t.

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