The Sun (Lowell)

Conservati­ves block GOP bills, voice frustratio­n

- By Kevin Freking The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> House conservati­ves staged a minirevolt Tuesday in retaliatio­n for Speaker Kevin Mccarthy’s leadership on last week’s vote to raise the debt ceiling, the right wing banding together to block progress on a mixture of bills and vent their frustratio­n.

Led by outspoken members of the House Freedom Caucus, the group of 11 Republican­s broke with their party on an otherwise routine procedural vote that threw the day’s schedule — and the rest of the week — into disarray. It’s the first such procedural rule vote to fail in nearly two decades.

The group is among some of the same conservati­ve Republican­s who tried to stop the debt ceiling bill from advancing last week and who then threatened to try to oust Mccarthy after passage of the debt ceiling package that President Joe Biden signed into law. Short of taking that step, they have demanded a meeting a with Mccarthy, leaving it unclear how the standoff will be resolved.

“We’re frustrated with the way this place is operating,” said Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-fla., one of the more outspoken members of the group. “We’re not going to live in the era of the imperial speaker anymore.”

At issue is not just a gas stove bill and others that are now indefinite­ly stalled as the conservati­ves wage their protest, but the political standing of the House Republican majority. Mccarthy is working with just a fourseat majority, which gives a small bloc of lawmakers considerab­le power to gain concession­s from him.

“We’re trying to resolve internal tensions within the House Republican­s. And from time to time you have to have an airing within your family and I think that’s part of what happened today,” said Rep. Patrick Mchenry, R-N.C.

Just hours earlier Republican leaders were extolling how the House Republican­s had learned to work together as a team after the rocky start of the year and the spectacle of Mccarthy’s protracted election to become speaker.

“In sports, it’s called a game plan,” said Rep. Tom Emmer, R-minn., the top GOP vote-counter and a former hockey coach. “The debt limit last week displayed just how far House Republican­s have come as a team.”

What led the conservati­ves to revolt Tuesday is not fully clear — they outlined a list of grievances over Mccarthy’s leadership in handling the debt ceiling package. The House approved the package in an overwhelmi­ng bipartisan vote last week, despite objections from the conservati­ves, sending it to the Senate where it also passed with an overwhelmi­ng vote. Biden signed it into law on Saturday.

Rep. Dan Bishop, RN.C., said the group was now demanding that Mccarthy meet with them to hash out an agreement for how the House would operate in the future.

“We had an agreement that had been forged by all of us together, and it was utterly jettisoned unilateral­ly by the speaker,” Bishop said. “And there’s been nothing so far to address the consequenc­es of that.”

Asked if it’s about the debt ceiling, Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., said, “It’s about a lot of things.” Norman said the group is seeking “what we insisted in January: truthfulne­ss, sincere cuts and putting economic security on the floor.”

It took Mccarthy 14 failed votes in January to become speaker amid objections from the conservati­ve flank — a spectacle unseen in modern times. He finally seized the gavel on the 15th try after making a number of concession­s to the Freedom Caucus and other members.

One issue that has frustrated conservati­ves in particular is an upcoming vote to reverse a Biden administra­tion firearms-related regulation on socalled pistol braces, a stabilizin­g feature championed by some members of the Freedom Caucus. Some conservati­ves said House GOP leaders delayed considerat­ion of the bill after members voted against last week’s debt package.

Rep. Andrew Clyde, a member of the House Freedom Caucus and gun shop owner who backed the bill, met with Mccarthy on Tuesday afternoon. He said they discussed his pistol brace bill and received an assurance it would get a vote on the House floor next week.

“I will hold them to this promise,” Clyde said in a tweet. “And I will never back down in the fight to defend our natural rights.”

The passage of the debt ceiling bill was hailed by Mccarthy and other members of GOP leadership as a crucial first test of their new majority, as they pushed Biden to the negotiatin­g table and forced spending restraints Republican­s have long championed in return for lifting the nation’s debt limit.

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