The Boston Globe

The craven Kevin McCarthy

- RENÉE GRAHAM Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @reneeygrah­am.

First, the good news. There’s a chance that Kevin McCarthy, House minority leader, will not be the next speaker of the House. Now, the very bad news. With Republican­s poised to take control by a slim margin, McCarthy will sell out this nation and its democracy to be House speaker. He will kowtow to the racist jackals and Jan. 6 defenders in his party and drag this country through hell if that means getting the gavel in his undeservin­g hands.

Of course McCarthy’s election is not a foregone conclusion. Come January, he might not have enough votes from his fellow House Republican­s to secure the job he has always wanted. He won the nomination for speaker, but that vote didn’t come without significan­t pushback from his party’s extremists who see McCarthy as a feckless coward unwilling to facilitate their plunge into the far-right abyss.

McCarthy easily won that first round, 188 to 31, but those numbers won’t cut it in a final vote, which is little more than a month away.

“Our current candidate for Speaker doesn’t have the 218 votes necessary to become Speaker on January 3, 2023,” said Representa­tive Andy Biggs, an Arizona Republican, who challenged McCarthy for the speakershi­p nomination and lost. “I do not believe he will ever get to 218 votes, and I refuse to assist him in his effort to get those votes.”

McCarthy hasn’t waited this long and gotten this close to realizing his political dream to have it derailed now. And because he is a feckless coward, there are few lines he won’t cross to get those votes.

But McCarthy won’t sell his soul. He can’t. He already gave that away after the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. While McCarthy privately roasted Trump for inciting his white supremacis­t followers in an attempt to upend the 2020 presidenti­al election outcome, he also recognized this: If Republican­s regained the House, the path to the speakershi­p would go through Mar-a-Lago.

McCarthy folded faster than a broken beach chair. Weeks later, there he was smiling and standing shoulder to shoulder with Trump in the former president’s vulgar Florida mansion. An infernal deal had been struck.

Clearly, part of that deal is amplifying hate-spewing zealots like Representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican. A self-described “Christian nationalis­t,” she told The New York Times that “to please the base, [McCarthy’s] going to give me a lot of power and a lot of leeway. And if he doesn’t, they’re going to be very unhappy about it.”

Gone are the days when McCarthy publicly condemned Greene for spreading antisemiti­c conspiraci­es and comparing mask mandates to Holocaust atrocities. He has promised to put her back on committees after her absurd tales from the QAnon crypt got her bounced from all assignment­s last year. In return, Greene has temporaril­y broken from the House’s right-wing ranks and says she will support McCarthy’s bid for speaker.

Every acquiescen­ce McCarthy makes to his party’s extremists is a loss for America. They’re demanding pointless and time-consuming investigat­ions so that’s what McCarthy is promising. If they want Biden administra­tion officials impeached, McCarthy is leaving that possibilit­y wide open. Never mind that solutions for mending the economy, reducing inflation, and addressing climate change won’t be found in Hunter Biden’s laptop.

Meanwhile, it took McCarthy a week to finally denounce Trump’s recent dinner guest, an avowed white supremacis­t. “I don’t think anybody should be spending any time with Nick Fuentes. He has no place in this Republican Party,” McCarthy told reporters Tuesday. But he stopped well short of directly criticizin­g Trump. He won’t risk offending his boss and will tread carefully around the party’s base of racists, Holocaust deniers, antisemite­s, and white evangelica­l Christian nationalis­ts.

Besides, what happens at Mar-a-Lago is a distractio­n for McCarthy. He remains focused only on becoming the first Republican since Paul Ryan to get that coveted gavel — which he said last year it would “be hard not to hit” outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with if he becomes speaker.

In the age of Trump, whichever Republican is elected speaker will be a dire choice. But McCarthy’s intentions are already clear. He’ll leave this nation in tatters to satisfy his ambitions. Now when I see McCarthy, I apply to him the line Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina spat at Democrats during Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing: “Boy, [you] want power. God, I hope you never get it.”

 ?? SAVE AMERICA PAC ?? Former president Donald Trump met with Kevin McCarthy at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., in January 2021.
SAVE AMERICA PAC Former president Donald Trump met with Kevin McCarthy at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., in January 2021.

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