The Guardian (USA)

McCarthy endorses Trump for president: ‘We’re very honest with each other’

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Former US House speaker Kevin McCarthy has endorsed Donald Trump in the 2024 race for the Oval Office while also expressing interest in joining his administra­tion should he win, even though loyalists of the ex-president drove the congressma­n into an early exit.

While serving as a House leader, McCarthy did not formally endorse Trump’s campaign for a second presidency, though the California representa­tive was generally supportive of his fellow Republican. But, four days after announcing in an opinion column in Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal that he was leaving Congress at the end of December, McCarthy appeared on CBS News Sunday Morning and made clear that he backed Trump’s attempts to return to power.

“I will support the president,” McCarthy told the show’s anchor Robert Costa on Sunday while discussing his post-congressio­nal plans. “I will support president Trump.”

After he confirmed those remarks were an endorsemen­t of the former president, who is grappling with a multitude of pending criminal charges, McCarthy was asked by Costa if he would be “willing to serve in a Trump cabinet”.

McCarthy replied, “In the right position. Look, if I’m the best person for the job – yes.”

He went on to say that he worked together with Trump for the Republican­s to seize what is now a four-seat majority in the House after a showing in the 2022 midterms that was widely considered to be underwhelm­ing for their party.

“Look, I worked with president Trump on a lot of policies,” McCarthy said. “But we also have a relationsh­ip where we’re very honest with each other.”

McCarthy lost his hold on the House speaker’s gavel in October after he relied on Democratic support to keep the federal government funded and open. As retaliatio­n, the far-right, pro-Trump faction in the House that helped make him speaker after enduring 15 votes for the role last year ensured he became the first ever ejected from the role by his own party.

It was a bitter twist for McCarthy, who had taken the far-right position 146 other congressio­nal Republican­s did when they voted to object to Joe Biden’s victory over Trump in the 2020 election.

McCarthy and his GOP colleagues maintained that position after a mob of Trump supporters attacked the US Capitol and breached its walls on 6 January 2021. Trump even received a visit at his Mar-a-Lago home from McCarthy shortly after the failure of the Capitol attack plunged the defeated president into an apparent depression, according to the Liz Cheney book Oath and Honor.

McCarthy’s support at one point prompted Trump to affectiona­tely refer to him as “My Kevin” at one point.

After his ouster, McCarthy pledged that he would not resign from Congress, saying he had “a lot more work to do”. But months of behind-the-scenes tension, including an alleged physical attack on Tennessee Republican House member Tim Burchett, appeared to change his mind and convince him to

step away in the coming weeks instead of when his term expires in early 2025.

McCarthy on Sunday said “Trump needs to stop” campaignin­g on promises of exacting revenge against his political enemies if returned to the Oval Office.

“America doesn’t want to see the idea of the retributio­n,” McCarthy said. “If it’s rebuild, restore and renew, then I think you’ll see that.”

Despite Trump’s gloomy message, McCarthy predicted Trump would clinch the White House, help Republican­s expand their numerical advantage in the House and retake a majority in the Senate if the Democrats nominate Biden for re-election.

Much of McCarthy’s congressio­nal agenda was blunted by Democratic control of the White House and the Senate, where the party has a 51-49 edge.

Trump faces 91 criminal charges accusing him of election subversion, illegal retention of government secrets and hush-money payments to an adult film actor. He has also contended with civil litigation over his business affairs and a rape allegation deemed “substantia­lly true” by a judge.

Nonetheles­s, Trump has emerged as the clear frontrunne­r to be the Republican­s’ 2024 presidenti­al nominee, and a Wall Street Journal poll published Saturday showed Trump leading Biden 47% to 43%.

“If Biden stays as the nominee for the Democrats, I believe Donald Trump will win,” McCarthy said. “I believe the Republican­s will gain more seats in the House and the Republican­s will win the Senate.”

 ?? Photograph: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images ?? Former speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy.
Photograph: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images Former speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy.

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