The Maui News - Weekender

McCarthy unveils House GOP’s midterm agenda in Pennsylvan­ia

- By LISA MASCARO

MONONGAHEL­A, Pa.— House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy on Friday confronted President Joe Biden and the Democratic majority in Congress with a conservati­ve midterm election agenda filled with Trump-like promises, working not only to win over voters but to hold together the uneasy coalition of his own party that has struggled to govern.

McCarthy, who is poised to seize the speaker’s gavel if Republican­s take control of the House in the fall, never once mentioned the former president. Instead, the GOP leader traveled to battlegrou­nd Pennsylvan­ia hoping to replicate the strategy that former Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia used to spark voter enthusiasm and gain a majority in 1994.

“What the ‘Commitment’ is, it’s a plan for a new direction,” McCarthy said at a manufactur­ing facility in a historic building along the Monongahel­a River.

The House GOP’s “Commitment to America” gives a nod to the earlier era but updates it in the age of Donald Trump, with economic, border security and social policies to rouse the former president’s deep well of supporters in sometimes-overlooked regions like this rusty landscape and rolling farmland outside Pittsburgh.

Slim enough to fit on a “pocket card,” which McCarthy pulled from his suitcoat, the agenda uses broad strokes—“A Future That’s Built on Freedom”—supplement­ed by more detailed proposals on energy, security and an end to liberal social policies, particular­ly in schooling.

President Joe Biden hit back quickly in a speech to the National Education Associatio­n.

He dismissed McCarthy’s agenda as “a thin series of policy goals with little or no detail.” But he provided his own details in urging support for

Democrats in the midterm elections.

“If Republican­s win control of the Congress abortion will be banned,” Biden said. He also criticized other GOP lawmakers for proposals to require reauthoriz­ation votes for Social Security and Medicare and opposition to gun control laws and efforts to lower prescripti­on drug costs.

“In 46 days, Americans are going to face a choice,” he said. “We have a real alternativ­e here.”

In Pennsylvan­ia, McCarthy said that if Republican­s win the House, the first bill next year will be to repeal funding approved by Democrats to bolster the Internal Revenue Service with more employees.

On Friday, he stood with a wide cross-section of lawmakers—from far-right Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., to less extreme GOP members of Congress—offering a portrait of unity despite the wide range of views that make up the House minority—and the Republican Party nationally.

The GOP in the Trump-era has shifted from its focus on small government, low taxes and individual freedoms to a more populist, nationalis­t and, at times, far-right party, essentiall­y still led by the former president, who remains popular despite the deepening state and federal investigat­ions against him.

Propelled by Trump’s “Make America Great Again” voters, the Republican­s need to pick up just a few seats to win back control of the narrowly split House and replace Speaker Nancy Pelosi. But even so, McCarthy’s ability to lead the House is far from guaranteed.

While Republican­s and Trump did pass tax cuts into law, the GOP’s last big campaign promise, repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare,” collapsed in failure. Republican speakers, including Gingrich, John Boehner and Paul Ryan, have been forced from office or have chosen early retirement, often ground down by party infighting.

“House Republican­s are really good at running people out of town,” said Matt Schlapp, chair of the Conservati­ve Political Action Coalition.

McCarthy, first elected to office in 2006, is among the remaining survivors of those House Republican battles, a leader who, somewhat like, Trump has shown more ability to communicat­e than to legislate.

A key architect of the Republican tea party takeover in 2010, the California Republican personally recruited the newcomers to Congress—many who had never served in public office and are now long gone. McCarthy was an early Trump endorser and has remained close to the former president, relying on Trump’s high-profile endorsemen­ts to propel GOP candidates for Congress. He abandoned an earlier bid to become speaker when support from House colleagues drifted.

He spent more than a year pulling together the House GOP’s often warring factions— from the far-right MAGA to what’s left of the more centrist ranks—to produce a mostly agreed-upon agenda.

In traveling to swing state Pennsylvan­ia, where Biden holds emotional ties from his early childhood, McCarthy sought to counter the Democratic president’s fiery Labor Day weekend speech, in which he warned of rising GOP extremism after the Jan 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

McCarthy he and fellow lawmakers chose Washington County not Washington, D.C. “Because it’s about you, it’s not about us.”

Along with as many as five House seats Republican­s believe they can pick up in Pennsylvan­ia in November, the state has one of the most watched Senate races, between Democrat John Fetterman and Trumpbacke­d Dr. Mehmet Oz. At the top of the ticket is the governor’s matchup between the GOP’s Doug Mastriano, who was seen outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, and Democrat Josh Shapiro.

“If you are a hard-line populist and you really want anger, Kevin’s a little frustratin­g because he’s not going to be angry enough for you,” Gingrich said. “On the other hand, if what you want is to have your values implemente­d and passed in the legislatio­n, he is a really good leader and organizer.”

Gingrich has been working with McCarthy and his team to craft the style and substance of the proposal.

Conservati­ve Republican­s complain privately that McCarthy isn’t leaning hard enough into their priorities, as he tries to appeal to a broader swath of voters and hold the party together.

 ?? AP photo ?? House Minority leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., greets supporters at DMI Companies in Monongahel­a, Pa. on Friday. McCarthy joined with other House Republican­s to unveil their “Commitment to America” agenda.
AP photo House Minority leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., greets supporters at DMI Companies in Monongahel­a, Pa. on Friday. McCarthy joined with other House Republican­s to unveil their “Commitment to America” agenda.

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