The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP is mired in an endless doom loop

Without quality candidates, we can’t win elections. Without winning elections, we can’t govern.

- By Geoff Duncan

After months of delay, the U.S. House of Representa­tives over the weekend finally passed a $95 billion foreign aid and weapons package, including $60.8 billion for Ukraine — and not a moment too soon. Days earlier, William Burns, director of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, warned Ukraine could lose the war with Russia by the end of the year because it’s “running out of ammunition.”

Yet, by a margin of 101112, more House Republican­s opposed the Ukraine component than supported it, meaning less than a majority of the party once led by Cold War crusaders such as Ronald Reagan stood with a key ally in their fight for survival. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., needed Democratic votes to get the bill over the finish line.

It was an embarrassi­ng spectacle.

Sadly, like the lies and conspiracy theories spread in the aftermath of the 2020 election, Georgia was at the epicenter of the action, and for all the wrong reasons. U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Rome, became the voice of the opposition to Ukraine, spewing hot air about deposing Johnson.

For the past month, Greene has been threatenin­g to move forward with a parliament­ary procedure known as a “motion to vacate,” which ended the tenure of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., less than a year ago. To win the gavel in the first place, McCarthy buckled to the demand of the hardliners to lower the threshold for a motion to vacate so that any single lawmaker could trigger the process. In the end, it was a deal with the devil, and McCarthy’s fate was sealed by a group of angry and ineffectiv­e legislator­s.

Therein lies the real problem. Until Greene no longer has a place of influence within the Republican caucus, our party has no business being in the majority and not much chance of governing. She is not a serious person, nor is she interested in addressing the challenges we face.

With a 22-point Republican advantage, her district in northwest Georgia is ruby red. Along with the 9th Congressio­nal District, Greene’s 14th is the most Republican in our state. Absent an act of self-destructio­n, her only serious political threat lies in a primary from her right flank, an unlikely prospect in this political climate.

She might never have to worry about winning voters in the suburbs, but her colleagues whose fate will determine control of the lower chamber in the next Congress do.

Remember: The highly vaunted “red wave” of 2022 never materializ­ed. Instead of the 60-seat pickup McCarthy had suggested, House Republican­s now are struggling to hold onto a simple majority with U.S. Representa­tive Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., heading for the exit early.

As a result of the GOP’s disappoint­ing midterm election and threadbare majority, rabble rousers, including Greene, wielded outsize influence.

It’s an endless doom loop. Without quality candidates, we cannot win elections.

Without winning elections, we cannot govern.

Unfortunat­ely, our party does not appear willing to take its medicine. In 2022 exit polls released by NBC News, 7 in 10 voters stated that democracy was “threatened.” Just this weekend, new data from NBC shows more voters labeling “protecting democracy or constituti­onal rights” as the most important issue determinin­g their vote, and it wasn’t even close. Relying on President Biden’s widespread disapprova­l and concerns about his age is not enough.

Yet the House GOP is more identified with the likes of Greene — who has trafficked in wild conspiracy theories, including baseless “space lasers” and rampant election denialism — than anyone else.

Credit is due Johnson, who brushed off threats to his job by stating, “you do the right thing, and you let the chips fall where they may.” He might be an accidental speaker, but he acted with courage, and he got results in a tough situation.

As the House heads into recess, his fate and future remain uncertain, as does the entire House Republican caucus. In the aftermath of the vote, Greene was fear-mongering about “a sellout of America” and saying Johnson needs to do the “right thing and resign.”

Doing the right thing is never the wrong thing. It’s a lesson lost on Marjorie Taylor Greene, who struggles to point her moral compass somewhere other than the ditch. But it’s one our party would be wise to take to heart if we want to compete on the national stage.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Congress finally passed vital aid to Ukraine despite the virulent opposition from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and her allies in the House of Representa­tives.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Congress finally passed vital aid to Ukraine despite the virulent opposition from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and her allies in the House of Representa­tives.
 ?? ?? Geoff Duncan
Geoff Duncan

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