Chattanooga Times Free Press

MCCARTHY’S LEADERSHIP STRATEGY SHOWING NO SIGN OF WORKING

- Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy. He is a former professor of political science at the University of Texas at San Antonio and DePauw University.

The Republican majority in the House isn’t even two months old, but it’s already clear that Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s attempt to mollify his party’s extremist faction risks hurting the country without guaranteei­ng the thing he wants most: to keep his job as House leader. There might not be immediate consequenc­es to McCarthy’s maneuvers, but the Republican leader is on the path to a painful government shutdown before the year is through, and he may even be on his way to a disastrous debt default.

McCarthy is facing the same no-win game that defeated Republican speakers John Boehner eight years ago and Paul Ryan a few years later. Far too many Republican­s in Congress have a principled opposition to compromise. Far too many of them are interested mainly in symbolic victories rather than substantiv­e policy change, and symbolism is inherently more difficult to bargain over than, say, dollars for district projects.

Recent GOP leaders also contend with constant jockeying by lawmakers seeking to differenti­ate themselves from (already very conservati­ve) mainstream Republican­s and appeal to the party’s right-wing base. But McCarthy also is dealing with a very narrow Republican House majority and a group of radical Republican­s who might push for his ouster as speaker at any time.

McCarthy’s solution to his predicamen­t is to give the extremists everything they ask for. That was sufficient to get him the job in the first place, albeit in an ugly fashion, during the session’s first week. And it’s producing plenty of programmin­g for Republican media, whether by providing Fox News’s Tucker Carlson exclusive access to surveillan­ce video from the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol or handing representa­tives like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz prominent roles on high-profile committees.

Those moves already have led to predictabl­e snafus and embarrassm­ents for the new majority. But presumably McCarthy is fine with that as long as he keeps his job — and mainstream Republican­s seem fine with it, too.

But McCarthy is eventually going to join with Democrats and vote to raise the debt limit so that the federal government can meet its payment obligation­s. Whether the vote happens before the nation defaults and causes catastroph­ic economic damage or afterward is largely up to him.

That McCarthy and Republican extremists will wind up on opposite sides is a consequenc­e of divided government. No member of Congress from either party likes voting to raise the debt limit; they all treat it as a tough vote. During periods when the president’s party has majorities in both chambers of Congress, the president’s party has to supply the votes. When there is a divided government, as is the case now, both parties will need to come up with the votes to make it happen and avoid economic mayhem.

Extremists might react to an eventual debt-ceiling deal by seeking to dump McCarthy as their party’s leader. It’s natural for McCarthy to attempt to find a path that avoids risks to himself. It’s possible that some Republican­s or even McCarthy himself believe that Biden and the Democrats will suffer in the 2024 elections from any economic calamity, regardless of who causes it. Not only would that be massively irresponsi­ble, but it’s hardly a sure bet. And the more obvious it would be that Republican­s are deliberate­ly harming the nation, the more likely it would be that the strategy could backfire on them. But it just isn’t possible. Waiting until after the damage of default is done won’t make the problem go away; even after a default, the limit still will need to be raised (and as soon as possible in order to contain the damage), and the same group will still blame the speaker for buckling to Biden instead of holding out for better terms. One thing McCarthy could ask for from Democrats as a price for passing the debt limit is for their support if his Republican opponents force a vote on whether he can remain as speaker.

McCarthy should get used to it. The exact same dynamics will be in play for passing bills to fund the government for the next fiscal year and for any other must-pass bill during the current Congress. McCarthy can defy extremist Republican­s before a government default or he can defy them after a default. His real choice isn’t whether to avoid that clash; it’s whether or not to precipitat­e an economic calamity.

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Jonathan Bernstein
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