South Bend Tribune

The far right, McCarthy can’t agree

How their feuding is spiraling into a shutdown

- Stephen Groves

WASHINGTON – With little time left to prevent a government shutdown, the House is in a familiar position: effectivel­y paralyzed as conservati­ves feud with Speaker Kevin McCarthy over matters large and small.

McCarthy has pushed the Republican conference to embrace a short-term funding plan that would include a sweeping Republican proposal for the southern border. But a small group of hard-line conservati­ves has defied the speaker in a quest to get rid of stopgap funding plans, known as continuing resolution­s, even if opposing them means forcing a government shutdown.

It’s left McCarthy at an impasse. The California congressma­n will likely be left with the political damage of a shutdown unless he turns to Democrats for help in passing a bipartisan bill. But working with Democrats would give hard-right Republican­s reason to remove him as speaker. Here’s what to know about the House Republican­s’ conflict and where it may be headed:

What are they fighting over?

At its core, the conflict is over how far to the right House Republican­s should push legislatio­n – and what level of compromise, if any, is acceptable.

Pragmatic Republican­s acknowledg­e they hold just one chamber of Congress and must negotiate legislatio­n with a Democratic president and the Democratic­held Senate. But some conservati­ves, organized

around the House Freedom Caucus – as well as the score of Republican­s who opposed McCarthy’s bid to become speaker – have taken combative stands as they try to disrupt business as usual in Washington.

They are determined to not only slash spending levels but remake the U.S. government, which they view with growing enmity and criticize as “woke and weaponized.” Some conservati­ves have downplayed the effects of a government shutdown and even contend that it would have benefits.

In the current clash over funding the government, the debate has centered on whether Congress should use stopgap funding legislatio­n to keep government offices running and paychecks for federal employees flowing beyond Friday, when the fiscal year expires.

What is McCarthy doing?

McCarthy is urging his fellow House Republican­s to avoid the political pain of causing a shutdown as he tries to protect his narrow House majority. But because Republican­s had such a slim majority to begin with, even a handful of holdouts can demand concession­s or prevent the party from moving forward on legislatio­n.

In his eight months as speaker, McCarthy has at times surprised Washington with his ability to maneuver with his fragile majority. But now that he is facing a government shutdown, he is caught between commitment­s he made during the two major crises Congress faced this year: the fight over choosing a House speaker and negotiatio­ns to suspend the nation’s debt limit.

McCarthy had to win support from almost every House Republican in his grueling bid to become speaker in January. To do so, he made a range of concession­s, including an agreement to cut government spending to certain levels and pass each of the 12 annual appropriat­ions bills individual­ly.

Then in June, as he negotiated with President Joe Biden to suspend the nation’s debt limit, McCarthy agreed to hold the government’s annual discretion­ary funding to $1.59 trillion. That deal passed the House, in part due to support from Democrats.

“He’s made promises to part of the conference with the deal that he cut with President Biden on certain numbers,” said Republican Rep. Ken Buck, who is part of the House Freedom Caucus. “Then he’s made promises to get elected speaker to a different part of the conference. And those two numbers are pretty far apart.”

Who are the other key players?

Rep. Matt Gaetz, a bombastic conservati­ve and close ally to former President Donald Trump, has emerged as the chief foil to McCarthy. The Florida Republican rallied GOP lawmakers to resist McCarthy’s bid to become speaker in January and is now openly threatenin­g a bid to remove him from the office.

At a closed-door GOP meeting on Thursday, Gaetz confronted McCarthy and asked whether he was involved in a campaign of conservati­ve internet influencer­s posting negative things about him. The speaker retorted that he would not waste time on something like that, according to Gaetz. Gaetz’s tactics prompted profanity-laced derision from Rep. French Hill, a close McCarthy ally.

McCarthy has tried to call Gaetz’s bluff and dared him to move on his threats. But for now, Gaetz is mostly focused on rallying Republican­s, such as Reps. Andy Ogles of Tennessee, Anna Paulina Luna of Florida and Eli Crane of Arizona, to stand firm in opposing any temporary funding bill.

How will the standoff end?

A shutdown is almost inevitable at this point. But the duration of the shutdown, and the future of McCarthy’s speakershi­p, is impossible to predict.

For now, McCarthy is still searching for support from his own party, hoping he can leverage his thin majority to force negotiatio­ns with Democrats. But the Senate is working on a temporary, bipartisan funding plan that is likely to pass in the coming days, adding more pressure on McCarthy to work with Democrats to avert a shutdown.

If McCarthy works with Democrats, Gaetz has promised he’ll try to oust McCarthy by filing a so-called “motion to vacate the chair.” Procedural votes could be offered to halt the motion, or it could trigger a House floor vote on whether McCarthy should remain speaker.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., talks to reporters Tuesday as Congress returned to work in crisis mode with a few days to go before a government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., talks to reporters Tuesday as Congress returned to work in crisis mode with a few days to go before a government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington.

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