Los Angeles Times

McCarthy’s Mar-a-Lago trip was his tipping point

Bakersfiel­d Republican shows he can be pushed around

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy weakened himself two years ago by calling out then President Trump for inciting the violent Capitol insurrecti­on, then rushing to his golf resort to beg forgivenes­s.

That was the tipping point for the Bakersfiel­d Republican. It showed everyone — including future far-right opponents of his speakershi­p — that he could be bullied into backing down. He had no hard and fast conviction­s. His words couldn’t be trusted. He lost respect among allies and enemies alike.

That’s how I figure it, anyway. And he disappoint­ed some politician­s, consultant­s and lobbyists who remember him as a trustworth­y, straight-shooting Republican legislativ­e leader in Sacramento.

McCarthy has spent six years kissing Donald Trump’s ring in an effort — now proved successful — to elect enough Republican House members to crown him speaker.

But in appeasing Trump and the far right, McCarthy lost credibilit­y. That led to last week’s Republican debacle when four days and 15 ballots were required before the Cali-

fornian could be elected speaker. Meanwhile, he was shoved around by “Never Kevin” hard-liners demanding and receiving concession­s.

OK, hold on. That may be accurate, but it’s also simplistic. It’s not the whole story. The underlying truth is that the politics McCarthy grew up with and mastered in California is no longer as effective in polarized America as it was preTrump, pre-social media and pre-Fox News.

McCarthy climbed the political ladder from volunteer gofer for a hometown congressma­n to U.S. House leadership by building relationsh­ips and compromisi­ng.

But for many of today’s demagogic politician­s, relationsh­ips — even with leaders — aren’t as important as social media clicks and cable TV interviews that enable them to communicat­e directly with a monolithic, anti-Washington political base. They’re cheered for attacking a potential House speaker, not collaborat­ing with him.

In this climate, the twoparty system — an essential ingredient of American democracy — is disrespect­ed.

When it’s working effectivel­y, party caucus members fight among themselves, then reach consensus on a leader and publicly unite behind the winner. McCarthy was backed by 91% of House Republican­s, but 9% rebelled and stubbornly blocked his ascension for four days. That hadn’t happened in a century.

“Politics is a team sport,” says former state Sen. Dick Ackerman of Irvine, who was the Senate Republican leader when McCarthy led the Assembly GOP from 2004 to 2006.

“It’s like 11 football players line up and two guys decide they’re not going to run the play that was called. How’s that going to work? It’s not.”

In this era’s polarized politics, compromise has become a dirty word among extremists on both the right and the left.

“For most of the 20th century, being a deal maker in Congress was considered to be a good thing. But during the speakershi­p fight, ‘deal maker’ was an insult used against McCarthy,” notes Dan Schnur, a political science professor at USC and UC Berkeley and a former Republican operative in Sacramento.

“The same skill that allowed Kevin to succeed in Sacramento has become his biggest obstacle in Congress.”

Well, yes and no. It’s ironic. House rebels accused him of compromisi­ng on principles — although the consensus among pundits is that he doesn’t have any principles. Yet the rebels demanded he compromise on rule changes before they’d allow his election.

The national drumbeat is that McCarthy coveted the speakershi­p so much that he surrendere­d much of its power to acquire the office.

“At some point you’ve just got to say ‘no,’ ” Ackerman says.

Republican consultant Mike Madrid, who was political director for the state GOP when McCarthy ran the district office for former Republican Rep. Bill Thomas of Bakersfiel­d, says:

“This is the story of someone who has spent his entire career climbing the ladder by placating the right wing and has almost been consumed by it. If you feed the alligators, when you have nothing else to feed them, they’re going to eat you.”

But the rap on McCarthy for giving away too much could be off base. We don’t know yet how these rules will work. They may turn out to be relatively innocuous. In legislativ­e bodies, there are always paths around rules if there’s strong-willed leadership.

The new speaker has been ridiculed for allowing far-right Freedom Caucus members more seats on the powerful Rules Committee. But coalition governing is normal in most democracie­s. What’s different here, of course, is that the coalition is solely within the GOP. Democrats are barred.

McCarthy is remembered in Sacramento as a pragmatic centrist, personable and down-to-earth.

When he was Assembly minority leader, Republican­s still were relevant in the state Capitol. Republican Arnold Schwarzene­gger was governor. Democrats held a comfortabl­e Assembly majority, 48 to 32, but it wasn’t a supermajor­ity like today’s 62 to18. Unlike today, state budgets required a two-thirds vote, so the GOP was in play.

Back then, I wrote that McCarthy was “mainly a deal maker rather than an ideologue. A pragmatist, not a policy purist. A political junkie.” Little has changed.

“He was very easy to work with, a straight shooter — not someone who would say one thing and do another,” recalls then-Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez, a Los Angeles Democrat. “He was very likable. And incredibly competitiv­e.”

GOP consultant Rob Stutzman, who was Schwarzene­gger’s communicat­ions director, recalls that McCarthy “would stand up to Arnold when it was needed for the Republican caucus.”

Except for one fleeting moment, however, he apparently has never stood up to Trump.

Last week, Trump tried to help McCarthy by urging hard-liners to stop blocking “my Kevin.”

So, it’s a mixed bag. Crawling down to Mar-aLago two years ago made McCarthy look weak. But if he hadn’t, would the Bakersfiel­d native have become speaker? We’ll never know. But he’d be more respected.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? McCARTHY talks with Rep. Andrew S. Clyde (R-Ga.) on the f loor of the House of Representa­tives during one of the votes for speaker.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times McCARTHY talks with Rep. Andrew S. Clyde (R-Ga.) on the f loor of the House of Representa­tives during one of the votes for speaker.
 ?? David McNew Getty Images ?? REP. KEVIN McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) and then-President Trump at a rally in 2020. The next year, he criticized the president for the Capitol insurrecti­on, then rushed to his resort to beg forgivenes­s.
David McNew Getty Images REP. KEVIN McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) and then-President Trump at a rally in 2020. The next year, he criticized the president for the Capitol insurrecti­on, then rushed to his resort to beg forgivenes­s.
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