San Diego Union-Tribune

MCCARTHY CHALLENGES CRITICS TO TRY TO OUST HIM

Freedom Caucus seeks concession­s on spending bills

- BY LISA MASCARO & FARNOUSH AMIRI Mascaro and Amiri write for The Associated Press.

Angry, frustrated and unable to lead a fractured and unruly Republican majority, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Thursday told the colleagues threatenin­g to oust him: Do it.

The embattled Republican leader essentiall­y dared his hard-right flank to quit holding the risk of a vote to remove him from the job.

If you’re going to do it, go ahead and try, McCarthy told the Republican­s behind closed doors.

“File the (expletive) motion,” McCarthy said, using a profanity for emphasis, according to those in the private meeting.

With a government shutdown looming, McCarthy is confrontin­g the same stubborn problem that has driven Republican­s before him from the speaker’s job — trying to lead a ruptured GOP majority that’s split between what’s left of the traditiona­l party and a harder-right element largely allied with former President Donald Trump.

Even his decision to launch an impeachmen­t inquiry against President Joe

Biden did little this week to appease the demands of the Freedom Caucus and others as they threaten to shut down the government in pursuit of deep spending cuts or move to a motion to oust him from office.

“I showed frustratio­n in here because I am frustrated with some people in the conference,” McCarthy said after the meeting in the Capitol basement as lawmakers were wrapping up for the week.

“But when we come back, we’re going to get this done. Nobody wins in a government shutdown.”

This may be the toughest moment yet for McCarthy, who is trying to survive his first year as House speaker and live to fight another day.

But now, after promises made and possibly dashed, he has barely any days left.

McCarthy has just nine working days to pass the spending bills needed to fund the government or risk a politicall­y devastatin­g federal shutdown.

An interrupti­on in government services would ripple across the country, almost certain to hurt his party politicall­y as Republican­s are blamed for the disruption and disarray.

Biden said in a speech Thursday that McCarthy and House Republican­s seem unable to honor the commitment­s they made as part of a June debt-limit deal and are now seeking deeper cuts. In his remarks, the president did not address the impeachmen­t inquiry nor the indictment Thursday of his son, Hunter, on gun-purchasing charges.

“They’re back at it again, breaking their commitment,” Biden said in Maryland. “Threatenin­g to shut down the government again this month.”

Led by Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, a core group of McCarthy critics is holding the threat of removal over him unless he meets conservati­ve demands.

A top Trump ally, Gaetz reiterated the conservati­ve flank’s many demands after McCarthy’s meeting — single-subject spending bills, a subpoena for Hunter Biden in the impeachmen­t inquiry and other priorities.

“So instead of emotionall­y cursing, let’s do this,” Gaetz chided. “We must begin immediatel­y. Pull yourself together, Kevin!”

None of the hard-right opponents of McCarthy rose to speak during the private morning meeting — in fact, few even showed up.

But McCarthy still addressed them directly — and profanely.

“Kevin doesn’t live in fear about this,” said Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla.

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