Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Mike Johnson’s Rise to Speaker Cements Far-Right Takeover of GOP – The New York Times

The roots of the Republican crackup this fall that paralyzed the House, fueled the unexpected rise of Speaker Mike Johnson and now threatens to force a government shutdown crisis early next year lie in a fateful choice the party made more than a decade ago that has come back to haunt its leaders.

In early 2009, congressional Republicans were staring down a long exile in the political wilderness. Barack Obama was about to assume the presidency, and Democrats were within reach of a filibuster-proof, 60-vote supermajority in the Senate and the largest House majority in more than 20 years after the economic crisis of 2008.

But Republicans saw a glimmer of hope in the energized far-right populist movement that emerged out of a backlash to Mr. Obama the first Black president and his partys aggressive economic and social agenda, which included a federal health care plan. Republicans seized on the Tea Party and associated groups, with their nativist leanings and vehemently anti-establishment impulses, as their ticket back to power.

We benefited from the anger that was generated against the one-way legislation of the Obama years, said Eric Cantor, the former House leader from Virginia who became the No. 2 Republican after the 2010 midterm elections catapulted the party back into the majority. It was my way or the highway.

Mr. Cantor and his fairly conventional leadership team of anti-tax, pro-business Republicans set out to harness that rage to achieve their partys longstanding aims. But instead, the movement consumed them.

Within four years, Mr. Cantor was knocked out in a shocking primary upset by a Tea Party-backed candidate who had campaigned as an anti-immigration hard-liner bent on toppling the political establishment. It was a sign of what was to come for more mainstream Republicans.

We decided the anger was going to be about fiscal discipline and transforming Medicare into a defined contribution program, Mr. Cantor said recently. But it turned out it was really just anger anger toward Washington and it wasnt so policy-based.

The forces that toppled Mr. Cantor and three successive Republican speakers reached their inexorable conclusion last month with the election of Mr. Johnson as speaker, cementing a far-right takeover that began in those first months after Mr. Obama took office.

Mr. Johnson, who identifies as an archconservative, is the natural heir to the political tumult that began with the Tea Party before evolving into Trumpism. It is now embodied in its purest form by the Freedom Caucus, the uncompromising group of conservatives who have tied up the House with their demands for steep spending cuts. And the situation wont get any easier when Congress returns from its Thanksgiving respite to confront its unsettled spending issues and what to do about assistance to Israel and Ukraine.

The ranks of more traditional Republicans have been significantly thinned after the far right turned on them in successive election cycles. They have been driven out of Congress in frustration or knocked out in primaries, which have become the decisive contests in the nations heavily gerrymandered House districts.

They thought they could control it, Michael Podhorzer, the former political director of the A.F.L.-C.I.O. who has studied the Houses far-right progression, said of G.O.P. leaders. But once you agree essentially that Democrats are satanic, there is no room in the party for someone who says we need to compromise with Democrats to accomplish what we need to get done.

The result, Mr. Podhorzer said, is a Republican majority that his research shows across various data points to be more extreme, more evangelical Christian and less experienced in governing than in the past. Those characteristics have been evident as House Republicans have spent much of the year in chaos.

It isnt that they are really clever at how they crash the institution, Mr. Podhorzer said. They just dont know how to drive.

From the start, members who were more rooted in the traditional G.O.P., which had managed to win back the House majority in 1994 after 40 years, struggled to mesh with the Tea Party movement, which was driven to upend the status quo. Many top Republicans had voted for the bank bailout of 2008, a disqualifying capital crime in the eyes of the far-right activists.

Leading congressional Republicans were leery of the Tea Partys thinly veiled racism, illustrated by insulting references to Mr. Obama and the questioning of his birthplace, though they said they saw the activists as mainly motivated by an anti-tax, anti-government fervor.

Traditional Republicans appeared at Tea Party rallies where they were barely tolerated, while the far-right Representatives Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and Steve King of Iowa, then outliers in the party, were the stars. They tried to mollify activists with tough talk on taxes and beating back the Obama agenda, but saw mixed results.

The Republican National Committee also sought to align itself with the Tea Party, encouraging angry voters to send virtual tea bags to Congress in a 2009 Tax Day protest. Tea Party activists rebuked the national party, saying it hadnt earned the right to the tea bag message.

But the Tea Party paid huge electoral benefits to the House G.O.P. in 2010, as it swept out Democrats and swept in scores of relatively unknown far-right conservatives, some of whom would scorn their own leaders as much as the Democrats. The steady march to the modern House Republican Conference had begun.

It truly was bottom up, said Doug Heye, a Republican strategist who was then the spokesman for the R.N.C. Then how do you have control over that? When you have that big a win, you are going to have people who just arent on your radar screen, but if they were, you would have tried to prevent them from winning their primary.

In the Senate, the Tea Party was having a different effect. Far-right conservatives such as Sharron Angle in Nevada and Christine ODonnell in Delaware managed to prevail in their primaries, only to lose in the general election. That cost Senate Republicans a chance to win a majority in that chamber. The extreme right has had less influence in the Senate than the House ever since.

The ramifications of the far-right bargain for congressional Republicans quickly became clear. Mr. Cantor was defeated in 2014, and Speaker John A. Boehner, dogged by hard-line conservatives he branded knuckleheads, resigned in 2015. In 2018, Speaker Paul D. Ryan, Mr. Boehners successor and the partys vice-presidential nominee in 2012, had his fill of clashes with President Donald J. Trump who aligned himself with the Tea Party in its early days and chose not to run for re-election.

Then Representative Kevin McCarthy the last of a trio called the Young Guns, with Mr. Cantor and Mr. Ryan, that once seemed to be the future of the party fell from the speakership in October. That ended the reign of House Republican speakers who had tried unsuccessfully to weaponize the ultraconservatives in their ranks while holding them at arms length.

Mr. McCarthys ouster cleared the way for Mr. Johnson, who was chosen only after House Republicans rejected more established leaders, Representatives Steve Scalise of Louisiana and Tom Emmer of Minnesota, who would have easily ascended in the previous era.

Despite his unquestioned conservative bona fides, Mr. Johnson is already encountering difficulties in managing the most extreme element within his ranks.

Last week, Freedom Caucus members blocked a spending measure in protest of Mr. Johnsons decision to team with Democrats to push through a stopgap funding bill to avert a government shutdown.

The move underscored the far-rights antipathy to compromise and the dominance it now enjoys in the House, and raised the prospect that Mr. Johnson could face another rebellion if he strays again.

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Mike Johnson's Rise to Speaker Cements Far-Right Takeover of GOP - The New York Times

Hunter Biden offers to testify publicly in House Republicans … – Reuters

[1/2]U.S. President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, walks outside on the day of his appearance in a federal court on gun charges in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., October 3, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein Acquire Licensing Rights

WASHINGTON, Nov 28 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden on Tuesday offered to testify publicly in the House Republican impeachment inquiry of his father's Democratic administration, while a leading lawmaker stuck to his demand of testimony behind closed doors.

Escalating a months-long investigation across three congressional committees, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives launched an impeachment inquiry into Biden in September, which focuses on Hunter Biden's business dealings.

House Republicans allege Biden and his family improperly traded access to Biden's office as vice president in President Barack Obama's administration. The White House denies wrongdoing.

As part of the inquiry, the House Oversight Committee has subpoenaed Hunter Biden, 53, to appear before the panel in a closed-door interview on Dec. 13. The panel also subpoenaed the president's brother, his late son's widow and Hunter Biden's business associates, among others.

The House Oversight Committee has held one public hearing as part of the probe, instead conducting most of their interviews in private.

Hunter Biden's lawyer on Tuesday blasted the panel's probe as "a fishing expedition" and an "empty investigation," telling the panel chairman a public hearing was the only way to prevent "your cloaked, one-sided process."

"We have seen you use closed-door sessions to manipulate, even distort the facts and misinform the public. We therefore propose opening the door," attorney Abbe Lowell wrote committee chairman James Comer.

Hunter Biden would appear for a public hearing on Dec. 13 or any other date in December that they could arrange, his lawyer said.

Comer said in a statement that the subpoena required Hunter Biden to appear for a deposition on Dec. 13, but added that he should also have a chance to testify publicly at another time.

"Hunter Biden is trying to play by his own rules instead of following the rules required of everyone else. That won't stand with House Republicans," Comer said.

The White House has called the investigation a "smear campaign" that "has turned up zero evidence."

Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, has cheered on the impeachment probe. During his four years in the Oval Office, he became the first president in U.S. history to be impeached twice. He was acquitted both times by the Senate.

Hunter Biden in October pleaded not guilty to charges that he lied about his drug use while buying a handgun, in the first-ever criminal prosecution of a sitting U.S. president's child.

Special Counsel David Weiss brought those charges against Hunter Biden after an earlier proposed plea deal unraveled under questioning from a judge. Weiss is still investigating whether the younger Biden can be charged for tax law violations.

The younger Biden earlier this month sought a federal court's permission to subpoena documents from Trump and top Justice Department officials in his administration as part of his defense against federal gun charges.

Reporting by Makini Brice and Susan Heavey; Editing by Scott Malone and Nick Zieminski

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Makini Brice has covered U.S. Congress since 2021. Aside from Washington, she has also reported in Senegal, Haiti and France. She was part of a team of journalists who detailed lawmakers' ancestors' ties to slavery.

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Hunter Biden offers to testify publicly in House Republicans ... - Reuters

Its Beginning to Look a Lot Like a Republican Government Shutdown – Yahoo! Voices

Government shutdown is back on the menu. The House GOP has made some ominous omissions from this weeks agenda: the appropriations bills that are meant to forestallsay it with us, once againthe impending government shutdown that is now scheduled to occur in mid-January.

After this week ends, the House will have just 16 legislative days to come up with a solution before the first of a two-part deadline is breached, which will set off a partial shutdown on January 19. Should the House continue to flail after that date, the government will roll into a full shutdown two weeks later, on February 2.

Funding the government for which they work hasnt been a major priority for House Republicans this year. So far, the caucus has passed two stopgap spending measures, narrowly avoiding shutdowns on crunched deadlines, all while garnering attention for their penchant for toxic infighting, which reached a fever pitch in early October when former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted from his leadership position for daring to arrange a bipartisan spending bill to prevent a shutdown calamity.

It has yet to be determined if the man who replaced him, Speaker Mike Johnson, is operating under the same conditionsrisking losing the gavel for simply doing what needs to be done to keep Capitol Hills lights on.

We need to show some real guts [on spending cuts], Tennessee Representative Tim Burchett told The Hill. Thats what weve kind of asked for.

While the names have changed atop the House GOP caucus, Johnson faces the same predicament as McCarthya divided yet rambunctious GOP with a razor-thin majority, set against a Democratic Party with a strong opposition to any cuts.

Conservatives are hoping to get through all 12 of the governments annual appropriations bills on a case-by-case basis, a strategy that might give them a slight edge in negotiations with the Senate, reported The Hill.

Republican Senator Chuck Grassley said he supported that plan on Monday, noting that hed prefer to see the bills passed before Congress breaks for Christmas. His Democratic counterparts werent so hopeful.

If you cant do it by September, then you cant do it by the middle of November, and you cant do it by December, why the hell do you think youre gonna get it done in January? Montana Senator Jon Tester told Politico. Theres never any urgency around this place to get shit done.

However, the appropriation bills are just one part of the puzzle. Congress has several big legislative matters on the near-term horizon, including about a half-dozen major priorities that could touch off showdowns of their own, including a border security bill and contentious foreign aid packages to Israel and Ukraine.

The same time constraints apply in these instances as well. But rather than forging ahead on this long parliamentary to-do list, the House GOP will first have to cope with another salacious story thats returned to the front and center this week: the proposed expulsion of Representative George Santos, who faces 23 charges related to wire fraud, identity theft, and credit card fraud. And if Santos gets expelled, that thin margin that Johnson is working with to prevent a shutdown and keep the lower House on track will become even more fragile.

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Its Beginning to Look a Lot Like a Republican Government Shutdown - Yahoo! Voices

Mitt Romney Names The 2 Republican Presidential Candidates He … – Yahoo News

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) says hed be happy to vote for most of the current field of Republican presidential candidates in next years election.

But there are two people he cant support.

One is former President Donald Trump. Romney told CBS News Norah ODonnell that Trumps election in 2024 would be devastating for our country.

ODonnell asked which of the remaining candidates he liked.

Anybody, Romney replied. Id be happy to support virtually any one of the Republicans. Maybe not Vivek [Ramaswamy], but the others that are running would be acceptable to me and Id be happy to vote for them.

Romney, who was the GOP presidential candidate in 2012, indicated hed be willing to cross party lines in certain cases.

Id be happy to vote for a number of the Democrats too, he added without naming them. I mean, it would be an upgrade from, in my opinion, from Donald Trump and perhaps also from Joe Biden.

The interview aired last month, but Romneys comments are getting renewed attention after Ramaswamy pinned the clip to his X feed over the weekend.

Not surprising, he wrote.

Romney didnt vote for Donald Trump in 2016 or 2020, saying he wrote in his wife, Ann Romney, in 2016. He said earlier this month hed likely vote for her again if 2024 is a rematch of 2020.

Its pretty straightforward. Its the same thing Ive done in the past. Ill vote for Ann Romney, wholl be a terrific president, he said on CNBC.

Romney is not running for reelection next year.

See his full CBS interview below:

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Mitt Romney Names The 2 Republican Presidential Candidates He ... - Yahoo News

Johnson Learns on the Job, Drawing the Ire of the Republican Right – The New York Times

Speaker Mike Johnson struggled to defend himself at a recent private party meeting on Capitol Hill when some House Republicans confronted their new leader asking for any evidence that he was leading them in a new direction or taking hits on their behalf.

Just Google my name and youll see, was Mr. Johnsons reply. He had been besieged by unflattering media coverage since winning the gavel (much of it focused on his evangelical Christianity and hard-line stances against abortion rights and same-sex marriage), the Louisiana Republican told his colleagues. He had even been mocked on Saturday Night Live, he noted, by not one but two different comedians.

Mr. Johnson, a fairly anonymous lawmaker before his election last month, has struggled to adjust to the new level of scrutiny that has come with his sudden ascent to the post second in line to the presidency. Some Republicans thought his response at the meeting reflected his steep learning curve as he settles into the job.

A mild-mannered Christian conservative who does not curse and rarely raises his voice, Mr. Johnson has pleaded for grace from his fellow Republicans as he has made some of the same moves that led them to oust his predecessor, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California.

Hard-right conservatives were enraged by his decision last week to team with Democrats to push through legislation to avert a government shutdown, which meant leaving out the spending cuts and policy changes they demanded. A group of them protested the move by blocking a separate spending bill from being considered the following day, even as Mr. Johnson implored them to give him a break and fall in line.

Speaker Johnson was on the floor of the House today, basically begging for forgiveness, frankly, from some of us in the Freedom Caucus who were giving him a lot of grief, trying to fight him and push him into the right direction on this spending bill, Representative Chip Roy, Republican of Texas, told constituents during a recent virtual town hall meeting.

I love Mike, Mr. Roy said, according to a recording of his remarks obtained by The New York Times. I told him on the floor of the House today, I said, Mike, this is strike one. It might even be strike two. Youre not going to get any hall passes on this. Im not going to hold you differently than I did Kevin McCarthy or anyone else.

Hes been put on notice, he added. You now need to do your job. Lets fight now.

Mr. Johnsons allies concede he is learning on the job, but they argue he is running the House in a far more functional way than his predecessor did and even demonstrating courage in doing so.

Hes got a spine of steel, Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the majority leader who had a toxic relationship with Mr. McCarthy but has a longstanding rapport with Mr. Johnson, said in an interview.

Mikes style is a lot different, Mr. Scalise said of the change at the top. He seeks input, and then when he makes a decision, he sticks with it. Hes willing to lean in and take the heat and then go out and sell it.

Taylor Haulsee, a spokesman for Mr. Johnson, said the speaker was committed to building consensus by empowering the Republican leadership team and seeking counsel from members across the conference.

Mr. Johnson, who for decades has championed his hard-line views on social issues in opinion pieces and public speeches, has left plenty to dig through to show the heavy influence his religious beliefs have on his policy stances and political worldview.

Since winning the gavel, his openness about how he practices his faith has also drawn considerable attention, leading to the Google hits he referred to behind closed doors with his colleagues.

In a recently surfaced video clip that was mocked on late-night television, for instance, Mr. Johnson explained how he and his eldest son relied on a third-party service to incentivize them not to view pornography online. The company, Covenant Eyes, which says it helps customers fight the lure of pornographic content online, monitors a users browsing and notifies their designated accountability partner Mr. Johnsons is his son, Jack, and vice versa if they view forbidden content. Its a common practice among evangelical Christians, who often pair up to support each others spiritual development, including the avoidance of sexual temptation.

On Capitol Hill, Mr. Johnson has not tried to hide from or apologize for his evangelical views. In his first meetings as speaker, he started off with a prayer asking God for cooler heads and unity to prevail; he has since led some meetings without doing so.

Its a stark stylistic change from Mr. McCarthy, whose references were based more in pop culture than in scripture. When the California Republican wanted to make clear he would not hold grudges against lawmakers who had tried to block him from the speakership, for instance, Mr. McCarthy quoted from Ted Lasso, telling his members that the happiest animal in the world was the goldfish, which was blessed with a 10-second memory.

On Capitol Hill, Mr. Johnson also is developing a reputation for a more collaborative approach than his predecessors. Unlike Mr. McCarthy, who did not solicit feedback from his top lieutenants and shot down ideas so routinely that they eventually stopped even raising them, Mr. Johnson regularly seeks input from Mr. Scalise, as well as from Representative Tom Emmer of Minnesota, the majority whip, and Representative Elise Stefanik of New York, the partys No. 4.

But hard-right Republicans and their allies outside the government are concerned that Mr. Johnson is veering toward the same pragmatism and establishment tendencies that drove Mr. McCarthy and his predecessors in the job, despite describing himself as an arch-conservative and pledging his allegiance to former President Donald J. Trump.

Mr. Johnson has told colleagues he wants to meet regularly with the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus to keep them apprised of his strategy, even if they disagree. For now, that is exactly where many of them find themselves. In a recent meeting, described by multiple people familiar with the exchange, Mr. Johnson tried to defend his legislation to avert a government shutdown, which they vehemently opposed, by arguing that it would ultimately help them achieve their goals.

Im doing this for your own good, he told the group, which had been pressing for deep spending cuts that were not included in the bill.

Many Republicans are concerned that Mr. Johnsons lack of experience is also leading him to make politically questionable choices.

His first substantive legislative decision was to tie $14 billion in aid to Israel to cuts to Internal Revenue Service enforcement, a deeply partisan move that was aimed at appeasing his far-right flank. But Mr. Johnson ultimately got nothing in return for that move. In the end, the measure predictably fell flat in the Senate, and the right wing still revolted over spending.

At the same time, Mr. Johnson has tried to assure more mainstream Republicans from competitive districts that he is pragmatic more than dogmatic, and that he recognizes he no longer just represents a deep-red district in a heavily Christian state. While he has opposed sending more aid to Ukraine, he has told Republicans that he is now willing to bring up a bill to do so but that he wants to leverage it to extract concessions from Democrats on border policy.

As he has angered his right flank, Mr. Johnson has won some early praise from Democrats. Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader, commended Mr. Johnson in a statement for embracing a bipartisan measure to keep government funding flowing. If he keeps doing that, I think we can get a lot done that will help a lot of people, Mr. Schumer said.

For now, while there may be brewing frustration with Mr. Johnson from the right, most Republicans do not think there is any appetite to oust another speaker before the 2024 election.

He started in a very difficult situation, Mr. Scalise said. I can tell each week hes definitely got a fuller grasp of the job.

Ruth Graham contributed reporting.

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Johnson Learns on the Job, Drawing the Ire of the Republican Right - The New York Times