The Capital

McCarthy will face a rocky road

- Carl P. Leubsdorf

For the past two years, Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi has conducted a political science class in how to manage the House of Representa­tives with a bare four-seat majority.

The result, backed by a Democratic White House and Senate, has been a spate of significan­t bipartisan legislatio­n — a long-sought infrastruc­ture bill and measures spurring domestic chips production, expanding veterans’ health programs and gun safety rules — plus Democratic priorities like curbing drug prices and combating climate change.

Now, Republican Kevin McCarthy is facing a similar challenge, assuming he can surmount the internal resistance that has left his ascent somewhat in doubt.

But his speakershi­p is likely to be very different from Pelosi’s, focusing more on oversight and investigat­ions rather than legislatio­n. That’s because he’ll be a Republican island in a Democratic sea, forced to confront a Democratic Senate and a Democratic president while barely able to control his fractious Republican House.

By all accounts, McCarthy, like Pelosi, is a prodigious fundraiser but lacks the legislativ­e skills she developed in 20 years as the Democrats’ top leader.

As a result, the GOP-controlled House may encounter difficulty passing all but the most routine legislatio­n, especially the appropriat­ions bills that are needed to fund the government. And it may only be able to muster a majority to raise the legal ceiling on the national debt — another necessity — by attaching conditions unacceptab­le to the Senate and the president or working with the Democrats, something McCarthy has never been able to do.

Besides, not only do GOP leaders face pressures from the three dozen members of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus that sank two previous Republican speakers, but the election produced a handful of more moderate GOP members from predominan­tly Democratic states. Their priorities are likely to be different from those of the Freedom Caucus.

So it is hardly surprising that, even before Republican­s clinched their House majority, the likely head of their Oversight Committee was publicly discussing his plans to pursue an investigat­ion of President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter — and his father.

Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., told CBS News last week he believes Hunter Biden’s overseas business dealings may have “compromise­d this White House.”

“Therefore, it’s a national security concern,” Comer said “And we take that very seriously, and we’re going to press forward with a credible, formal investigat­ion of the president of the United States.”

The Bidens are not likely to be the only high-level GOP target. Earlier this week, a group of House and Senate Republican­s met to discuss possible probes that reportedly included one on the COVID-19 pandemic likely to focus on Dr. Anthony Fauci.

They included Comer; Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, likely to chair the Judiciary Committee; and four investigat­ion-minded GOP senators in Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Roger Marshall of Kansas and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin. Paul, who would have been a subcommitt­ee chairman in a Republican Senate, has frequently clashed with Fauci, while both Grassley and Johnson have pressed efforts to probe Hunter Biden.

Among other non-legislativ­e items on the House GOP agenda: retaliator­y moves against the outgoing Democratic majority, including an effort to remove several prominent Democrats from their committees. Targets include Intelligen­ce Committee Chair Adam Schiff of California and controvers­ial liberal Minnesota Rep. Ilhan

Omar.

It would be a response to the Democrats’ ouster of right-wing firebrands Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul Gosar of Arizona from their committees for threatenin­g Democratic lawmakers. The GOP plans to reinstate both, disband the Jan. 6, 2021, investigat­ing committee and scrap measures the Democrats instituted to cope with the pandemic.

In the next few weeks, McCarthy will have to mollify enough GOP holdouts to ensure he gets 218 votes when the House meets Jan. 3 and elects its speaker. Pelosi was able to do that when confronted with similar resistance after the Democrats took over the House in the 2018 election.

But that won’t be the end of it. Having such a minuscule GOP margin will repeatedly enable recalcitra­nt members to pressure McCarthy, like rival moderate and progressiv­e Democratic factions did to Pelosi the past two years.

That’s one reason for Republican­s to choose the easier path of confrontat­ion. Another might be pressure from former President Donald Trump, who has substantia­l influence with McCarthy and had a better record electing GOP House members than governors and senators.

Trump, who formally announced Tuesday night he is seeking the 2024 GOP nomination, is already reportedly pushing for a confrontat­ional approach. According to a preelectio­n Rolling Stone article, Trump has been calling his House allies, asking about their plans to impeach Biden.

But the Republican­s will have to face the fact that, although they flipped House control, the results were far more red ripple than red wave. Their margin will rival the outgoing Democrats in having the smallest House majority in 70 years.

The margin was almost identical when the Democrats regained the House in 1954 in the first midterm election of President Dwight Eisenhower’s administra­tion, after Republican had held a similarly narrow majority the prior two years.

But the climate was far different, and their leader, Speaker Sam Rayburn, was a Texan who worked closely with fellow Texas natives Lyndon Johnson, the Senate Democratic leader, and Eisenhower.

Those kinds of cross-party relationsh­ips don’t exist in today’s hyper-partisan world, so McCarthy will be pretty much flying solo.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Kevin McCarthy lacks the legislativ­e skills of outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, writes Carl P. Leubsdorf.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Kevin McCarthy lacks the legislativ­e skills of outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, writes Carl P. Leubsdorf.
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