Los Angeles Times

Bakersfiel­d lashes out at Rep. Gaetz as ‘traitor’ to GOP

In Kevin McCarthy’s hometown, supporters curse divisive politics that took him down.

- By Laura J. Nelson

BAKERSFIEL­D — Minutes before the vote that cost California’s Rep. Kevin McCarthy his job as speaker of the House, three Republican voters lunching in his hometown cursed the scorched-earth politics in Washington.

The conservati­ve women said McCarthy had been left with two bad choices in the days before his ouster: Risk a revolt from the hard right and cut a deal with Democrats to pass a funding bill, or acquiesce to the hardliners and shut down the federal government, wrecking the economy.

Ultimately, they thought, McCarthy did the right thing — and paid the price on Tuesday.

“He was damned if he did, damned if he didn’t,” said Leslie Walters, a real estate agent and registered Republican, as she finished eating with two friends on the patio of the 24th Street Cafe, a 1950s-style joint in downtown Bakersfiel­d.

Walters said she was sorry to see the end of McCarthy’s speakershi­p. His 269-day tenure hadn’t been perfect, she said, but he was a good guy, and a far better option than “having Nancy Pelosi for a million years.”

In McCarthy’s Central Valley congressio­nal district, the most Republican in the Golden State, many residents fumed about the summary political execution of California’s first Republican speaker of the House.

There was plenty of blame to go around, but the vast majority of the rage in the hours after McCarthy’s drubbing was directed at one person: Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), who — with seven other Republican­s — joined House Democrats in voting McCarthy out.

“Matt Gaetz is a narcissist­ic, evil and vengeful little man,” said Annette Londquist, the head of Bakersfiel­d Republican Women, a club that counts McCarthy among its 515 members.

Gaetz “is an angry man,” she said, “and his anger is aimed at Kevin. I would say he just couldn’t let go of the vengeance in his heart, but he doesn’t have a heart.”

Put another way, said Clayton Campbell, vice chair of the Kern County

Republican Party, Gaetz has “this delusional view of his own importance.”

“He is important in the way that a faulty bolt on a jetliner is important,” Campbell said. “It can cause incredible damage without doing anything good.”

The ultimate betrayal, Campbell said, was that Gaetz had criticized McCarthy for working with Democrats, then turned around and banded together with the opposing party to oust him.

“He is a traitor,” Campbell said. “In the American Revolution, King George and the British Army were the enemy — but Benedict Arnold was the bigger traitor, because he was supposed to be on our side.

“Matt Gaetz is supposed to be on our side. And then he plays this game and helps the Democrats. He is a Benedict Arnold.”

McCarthy, who grew up in Bakersfiel­d, won his last election by more than 34 points and has built up decades of goodwill locally.

Some constituen­ts fondly recall his early days running the Kevin O’s sandwich counter inside his uncle’s yogurt shop. Others see him walking his dogs or know his wife, whom McCarthy met at Bakersfiel­d High. Even a few who can’t stand his politics don’t mind the chicken Parmesan pizza that bears McCarthy’s name at a local Italian joint.

“He grew up in Kern County, and he knows every corner of it,” said Greg Perrone, president of the Greater Bakersfiel­d Republican Assembly, a conservati­ve group. “He didn’t go to some Ivy League school and then come back and try and fix things. He isn’t a transplant.”

Perrone said he had mixed feelings about McCarthy’s tenure as the 55th speaker of the House. Too often, he said, McCarthy was willing to compromise on conservati­ve ideals, including in the deal with Democrats that averted a government shutdown.

He said he mostly aligns politicall­y with Gaetz and other members of the rightwing House Freedom Caucus. He’s a budget hawk and strong supporter of the 2nd Amendment and antiaborti­on policies. But Perrone said he differs with Gaetz “in cases like this,” because Gaetz had no Plan B after ousting McCarthy.

“I don’t regret standing up for choosing governance over grievance,” McCarthy said in a news conference Tuesday after being voted out as speaker. “I do not regret negotiatin­g; our government is designed to find compromise. I don’t regret my efforts to build coalitions and find solutions. I was raised to solve problems, not create them.”

Republican strategist Cathy Abernathy, who gave McCarthy his first job in politics as an intern in former Rep. Bill Thomas’ office in the 1980s, said what left her most surprised was that 208 Democrats joined the eight Republican­s in ousting McCarthy.

“The tables were turned — I’ve never seen it happen,” Abernathy said. “They could have stepped aside and just watched what was going on, but they wanted to participat­e. It wouldn’t have worked without the Democrats.”

Gaetz filed the motion to oust McCarthy late Monday night, taking advantage of chamber rules that the House majority approved in January — part of a deal that McCarthy cut to be elected speaker — that allow any lawmaker to force a quick vote on booting the speaker.

McCarthy, speaking to reporters Tuesday, noted the rule meant that “even if you have 96%,” the speaker can still be forced out. “That is not a government that works,” he said. “That is chaotic.”

The three friends at lunch in Bakersfiel­d on Tuesday wrangled over the question of blame, as well as the direction of the Republican Party.

“I don’t even see it as a GOP problem,” said Margot Shinn, a residentia­l mortgage lender who lives down the street from McCarthy. “It’s the far right — you know, Matt Gaetz and that group.”

Shinn added, with a touch of frustratio­n in her voice, that she didn’t envy McCarthy’s old job, which she likened to herding cats.

“The party is beginning to fray,” she said. “And now there’s no room for compromise. You have to be able to be flexible, like a willow tree — you have to bend.”

Kernville resident Lyle Teunissen, 67, spent his lunch break from jury duty Tuesday outside Dagny’s Coffee Co. in downtown Bakersfiel­d with a blueberry muffin, a coffee and an Oliver Sachs book. Teunissen, who said he is a Democrat, said that he thought McCarthy was a good guy and that he had voted for him before.

The retiree, who previously worked cleaning roadways for groups registered for Caltrans’ Adopt-AHighway Program, said he liked that McCarthy stuck his neck out to avert a government shutdown.

“What good does it do to throw a fit?” Teunissen said. “It takes a lot of guts to be in politics right now.”

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? REP. MATT GAETZ, center, is being characteri­zed as “evil,” “delusional” and a “Benedict Arnold” by Bakersfiel­d-area residents for leading the speaker’s ouster.
Drew Angerer Getty Images REP. MATT GAETZ, center, is being characteri­zed as “evil,” “delusional” and a “Benedict Arnold” by Bakersfiel­d-area residents for leading the speaker’s ouster.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? IN BAKERSFIEL­D, hometown Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy continues to enjoy strong support.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times IN BAKERSFIEL­D, hometown Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy continues to enjoy strong support.

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