Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

State GOP welcomes McCarthy amid turmoil

House leader urges unity to calm uproar over his remarks on Trump after Jan. 6.

- By Seema Mehta

ANAHEIM — House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, under scrutiny for saying after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot that he would urge then-President Trump to resign, alluded to the turmoil during a speech Saturday night at the California GOP convention.

“As we go out to earn this majority, they’re going to attack you, they’re going to attack me. They’re going to attack President Trump,” he said, speaking of GOP aims to win control of the House in the November election.

“They’re not just going to use the Democrats; they’re going to use the media as well,” he said. “We have to be united, and we have to be prepared for it.”

The Bakersfiel­d Republican’s speech before a friendly audience in Anaheim came after a tumultuous two days, starting with a New York Times report that he had told fellow GOP leaders in early 2021 that he planned to urge Trump to resign. McCarthy vehemently denied the report, calling it “totally false and wrong” and denigratin­g the reporters, but hours later, audio was released of him making such comments on a recorded call.

The 57-year-old Trump confidant has been widely expected to become the next speaker of the House — second in line to the presidency after the vice president — if the GOP takes control of the chamber in the November election as anticipate­d.

However, questions have swirled about his prospects since the release of the audio — less because McCarthy’s denial was proved to be false and more over speculatio­n

on Trump’s reaction to the disclosure­s. Some say McCarthy’s fate fully depends on the former president.

“The potential threat to McCarthy would have been if Trump went full bore against him. But without that, it’s hard for opponents to use that. He’s been very resilient and survived attacks in the past,” said Matt Shupe, chairman of the Contra Costa County Republican Party. “You would be grossly underestim­ating him to say that he’s down and out.”

On Friday, Trump told the Wall Street Journal that although he was not happy about McCarthy’s comments on the recording, their relationsh­ip was unharmed. McCarthy had ultimately not urged him to quit, Trump said, but had instead quickly turned to supporting the then-president.

Some say Trump’s words are a ploy to smooth over the matter until the election.

“MAGA-land is enraged .... They’re going to play nice through the election, but Kevin McCarthy is not going to be the speaker of the House if the Republican­s win back the House,”

said a California Republican who is closely tied into Trump’s network, and who asked for anonymity to candidly discuss the situation.

“Wherever this leaked audio came from, it’s not good for Kevin,” the source added.

Trump representa­tives did not respond to a request for comment.

Also Friday, facing questions after speaking to high school students in Kern County, McCarthy told reporters that he was not a liar, saying he had never asked the president to resign.

The article he called “false” did not say he’d asked Trump to resign — only that he’d told fellow Republican leaders he was considerin­g doing so, as the recording confirmed.

“The only discussion I would have with him is I think [an impeachmen­t resolution] would pass and it would be my recommenda­tion you should resign,” McCarthy says in the audio recording provided to MSNBC by New York Times reporters. “I mean that would be my take, but I don’t think he would take it. But I don’t know.”

For a party licking its

wounds after a crushing defeat in last year’s attempted recall of Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, this weekend’s convention was supposed to be a moment of optimism. The walls were plastered with campaign signs. Vendors hawked hats with “Trump” spelled out in white rhinestone­s and bedazzled with American flags. Drinks and food flowed freely at candidates’ hospitalit­y suites.

Delegate Gerri Grego of South Lake Tahoe said she was most looking forward to meeting candidates.

She was unaware of the McCarthy dispute.

Stacie Lehfeldt, a convention guest from Oakley, said she learned of the revelation­s Friday morning on television, but said she needed to learn more. “I try not to watch too much because media is so liberal, one-sided,” she said.

The GOP is expected to retake control of Congress due partly to rising inflation and President Biden’s low approval ratings, and because the party controllin­g the White House typically loses seats in the first midterm election of an administra­tion. Speaker after speaker at the convention pointed to these issues, as well as crime and homelessne­ss, as reasons they were hopeful about Republican­s’ prospects even in a state where they are vastly outnumbere­d by Democrats.

Culture war issues were also a constant theme. Speakers criticized transgende­r athletes, warned of what they said was “indoctrina­tion” of schoolchil­dren, and lambasted what they deemed to be “critical race theory.”

“This is our destiny as Republican­s: to fight the evil ‘woke,’” said Eric Early, a candidate for attorney general.

GOP efforts to win statewide offices in California are long shots, with Democrats holding a nearly 23-percentage-point edge in voter registrati­on over Republican­s as of March. But there could be some good news for state Republican­s after the election. If the GOP takes control of the House, McCarthy could take the speaker’s gavel from San Francisco Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi, who is reviled among conservati­ves.

“Think if you will of this time next year. The speaker of the House will be from California,” Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina said to applause at a Friday night dinner. “Now, for those of you who think I might be confused, I should have said he will be from California .... Good times are coming. Never give up. Never surrender.”

McCarthy was in the running for House speaker before, in 2015. But he dropped out of the race suddenly, saying he did not believe he could unite the divided GOP.

The former state lawmaker, who was first elected to Congress in 2006, has been a controvers­ial figure among California Republican­s. He is popular with party leadership and elected officials in part because of his fundraisin­g prowess. In the first three months of this year, McCarthy shattered records by raising more than $31 million through his campaign committee, leadership PAC and multiple joint fundraisin­g committees, according to the Federal Election Commission.

“When Republican­s take the House, I have no doubt that he will be the next speaker of the House,” said state party Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson, a McCarthy protege. “He’s an amazing leader. Not only do California­ns need him right now — America needs him right now.”

But grass-roots activists have long been unhappy with McCarthy’s efforts to influence who wins party nomination­s, and skeptical of where exactly he stands — a conundrum exemplifie­d by his relationsh­ip with Trump even before the audio about resignatio­n emerged.

McCarthy was among Trump’s earliest supporters in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign and his most vocal and loyal defenders once he won office, leading Trump to affectiona­tely label him “my Kevin.”

But McCarthy offered a dizzying set of statements after the insurrecti­on: first saying the then-president was to blame for the violence unleashed by his supporters, then days later contradict­ing himself by claiming that Trump’s rally speech on Jan. 6, 2021, did not incite the mob that invaded the U.S. Capitol that day.

At the Anaheim convention, McCarthy repeatedly praised Trump.

“President Trump helped build the strongest economy in our nation’s history,” McCarthy said to a packed and appreciati­ve room.

The former president’s strength had helped keep the nation’s enemies “at bay,” McCarthy continued. “We know what it takes to get the job done. We are fighting alongside him.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? “THEY’RE GOING to attack you, they’re going to attack me,” Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said in Anaheim. “They’re going to attack President Trump.”
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times “THEY’RE GOING to attack you, they’re going to attack me,” Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said in Anaheim. “They’re going to attack President Trump.”

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