Mccarthy tells colleagues he never asked Trump to quit
WASHINGTON — House GOP Leader Kevin Mccarthy told colleagues Wednesday he never asked then-president Donald Trump to resign over the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the Capitol as he defended private conversations around the siege that have spilled into the open and jeopardized his leadership.
It was the first time Mccarthy, who’s in line to become House speaker if Republicans win control in the fall midterm election, addressed his colleagues face-toface as he works to stem the fallout from his criticisms of Trump and far-right members of their party.
He got a standing ovation. One Republican in the room said the meeting was “cathartic” for lawmakers. Another voiced confidence that Mccarthy would be the “next speaker.”
“He’s got the support of the conference and then some,” Rep. Dan Meuser, R-PA., said as he left the private session at GOP headquarters across the street from the Capitol.
Yet amid the show of support, Mccarthy was challenged by two of the party’s most hard-right lawmakers — Matt Gaetz of Florida
and Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia — who said they felt singled out by the leadership team for their fiery comments around Jan. 6. Trump ally Rep. Scott Perry, R-PA., who helped organize challenges to the 2020 election results, also voiced concerns, another Republican said.
But the detractors appeared to be in a dwindling minority as rank-and-file lawmakers rallied around Mccarthy, the man who recruited many of them to Congress and now is raising untold millions to help them win back the House majority.
“You guys obsess over Jan. 6. Nobody cares,” Rep. Glenn
Grothman, R-wis., told reporters outside House GOP headquarters. “It’s history.”
A California Republican long eyeing the speaker’s gavel, Mccarthy is at a critical juncture as he works to ascend to the top leadership position. It will be his second try after a failed 2015 bid — but one now fully dependent on his volatile relationship with Trump, who still holds great influence over the party and can make and break careers.
New audio recordings released in recent days by the New York Times portray Mccarthy as fed up with Trump in the aftermath of the Capitol attack, when the defeated president rallied his supporters to head to Congress and object to Democrat Joe Biden’s election victory.
In the recordings, Mccarthy is heard telling Republicans privately that he was considering asking Trump to resign. In another recording released late Tuesday, Mccarthy warns that dangerous public commentary from Gaetz and others is “putting people in jeopardy” of potential violence.
Mccarthy has denied the New York Times’ account of events, leading Democrats and others to call him a liar after audio of the secretly recorded calls was released. The House committee investigating Jan. 6 is seeking an interview with him.
On Wednesday, Mccarthy stood at party headquarters and defended his actions, suggesting he was merely running through possible scenarios as Democrats moved to impeach Trump in the aftermath of the violent siege.
In the GOP meeting, Mccarthy clearly stated that he never asked the president to resign, the Republicans said. He also has publicly said he didn’t do so.
The Times didn’t report that he asked Trump to resign, only that he told Rep. Liz Cheney, R-wyo., and other members he would.
As president, Trump had affectionately referred to Mccarthy as “My Kevin,” one of his earliest endorsers, but their relationship has frayed over time. Mccarthy momentarily turned on Trump as his supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 to disrupt certification of Biden’s 2020 presidential win.
In the days after the riot, it seemed Republicans in Washington might part ways with Trump. Senate Republican Leader Mitch Mcconnell gave blistering speeches against Trump, and Mccarthy’s public and private conversations at that time show flashes of anger and the depth of angst over the shocking, devastating riot by Trump supporters.
But once Biden took office Mccarthy quickly went to Trump’s Mar-a-lago club in Florida to patch things up with the defeated president.
Trump and Mccarthy spoke last week, and the former president told the leader he was “not mad” about the disclosures.
“President Trump said their relationship has never been stronger. That’s good enough for me,” said Roger Williams, Rweatherford. “We’re totally supportive of Kevin Mccarthy.”
“He’s got my support. He’s got everybody else’s support, too,” he said.