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Republicans Started a Civil War They Don’t Know How to End
By Ben Jacobs, a reporter in Washington, D.C.
The third loser in less than three weeks. Photo: Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg
via Getty Images
House Republicans haven’t been terribly successful at many things this
year. They struggled to keep the government open and to keep the United
States from defaulting on its debt. They’ve even struggled at times on
basic votes to keep the chamber functioning. But they have been very good
at one thing: regicide.
On Friday, Republicans dethroned Jim Jordan as their designated Speaker,
making him the third party leader to be ousted this month. First, there
was Kevin McCarthy, who required 15 different ballots to even be elected Speaker and was removed from office by a right-wing rebellion at the
beginning of October. Then, after a majority of Republicans voted to make McCarthy’s No. 2, Steve Scalise, his successor, a number of Republicans announced that they, too, would torpedo his candidacy and back Jordan
instead. Finally, once Republicans finally turned to Jordan as their
candidate, the largest rebellion yet blocked him from becoming Speaker.
After losing three successive votes on the floor, the firebrand lost an internal vote to keep his position as Speaker designate on Friday.
After two weeks of Republican chaos, the House is frozen without a leader, imperiling both the prospect of keeping the U.S. government open with a
funding deadline less than a month away, and supplying U.S. allies Israel
and Ukraine with aid to shore up their defenses. Next week, Republicans
will attempt yet again to elect a Speaker, as the party explores new, previously unimaginable levels of division, chaos, and bitterness.
In particular, the fight over Jordan’s candidacy has opened new wounds in
a party full of them. Many of the same rebels who held McCarthy hostage in January were also those who helped block Scalise in order to hold the
position open for their favored candidate, Jordan. But they soon got a
dose of their own medicine from Establishment Republicans outraged over
the gambit. This led to a perfect storm for Jordan that united members concerned about his hard-right beliefs with those embittered that the hard right had blackmailed the conference by sinking anyone but Jordan.
“My vote counted less than everyone else’s vote,” said Don Bacon, an anti- Jordan moderate from Nebraska. “In America, all of our votes count the
same.” As Pat Fallon of Texas, who backed Jordan on the floor, described
it, “If you let 20 people run your conference when there’s 221 members, it
gets the other members a little antsy and a little angry.”
The hard feelings got worse after an aggressive lobbying campaign from right-wing influencers that led to a tirade of angry calls and even death threats to members opposed to Jordan’s candidacy. It also didn’t help that
his lobbying campaign lacked a certain personal touch. As one person
familiar with his efforts to woo dissidents put it, “The more outreach he
does, the worse it gets for him.”
“It used to be I was voting for Kevin McCarthy,” said Carlos Gimenez of Florida. “Now I’m not voting for Jim Jordan.”
Unlike many of those who blocked McCarthy’s effort to be Speaker at the
start of the year, Jordan’s opponents didn’t want any policy concessions
or powerful perches in exchange for their vote. When Jordan held a last-
ditch meeting with holdouts on Thursday, it was clear negotiation was impossible. “When he met with a number of us, he asked us what we wanted,” Gimenez said. “We don’t want anything.”
Despite seemingly impossible odds, Jordan was reluctant to drop out. He
held a press conference Friday morning, where he told a long anecdote
about the Wright Brothers from his native Ohio before yet again losing on
the floor of the House. At that point, Republicans assembled yet again in
a closed, windowless room to decide his fate. Cell phones were placed
outside to prevent leaks, and carts of pizza were wheeled in to stave off hunger. While only 25 Republicans openly voted against Jordan on the
floor, 112 cast a secret ballot for him to drop out. They saw no path
forward for him. “There’s no more runway,” said Fallon. “We’re at the end
of it.”
The mounting problem is not simply that Republicans are unable to elect a Speaker, but also that the House can’t function without one. The chamber’s rules require a Speaker to be elected for even the most basic functions,
like voting on legislation. Although Patrick McHenry, a Republican from
North Carolina, is currently serving as a placeholder in the role under a post-9/11 provision to ensure continuity of government, he has insisted he
has no power to do anything save preside over the election of a permanent Speaker. Proposals to formally empower McHenry until a Speaker is elected
have been rejected by Republicans so far.
So, the question is who would be next on the chopping block. “We took our leader out, we took our second-in-command out, we took our grassroots folk
hero out,” Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota told reporters before Jordan’s ouster. “Eventually, we’re going to run into an attrition problem. That’s unsustainable.” Already, a host of potential candidates were popping up to mount their own bid next week despite the unpleasant and unstable nature
of the position.
Jake Ellzey of Texas consistently voted for his colleague Mike Garcia of California on the floor this week in order to block Jordan — they flew jet fighters together in the Navy. “I’d take a bullet for that guy. I love the guy,” Ellzey said. Why then would he subject such a close friend to such a
grim fate? He conceded, “There is a duality there.”
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2023/10/republicans-started-a-civil-war- they-dont-know-how-to-end.html
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