Kevin McCarthy's wild ride as US House speaker ends in historic fall
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[October 04, 2023]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Kevin McCarthy began his wild ride as speaker of
the U.S. House of Representatives in a chaotic January week and ended it
nine months later in a historic fall, when he became the first speaker
to be removed from the top post.
Two decisions by the California Republican contributed to his undoing.
The first came during the agonizing 15 votes he endured over four days
early this year when he agreed to a change of House rules allowing any
single member of the House to call for a motion to oust the speaker.
Coupled with his narrow 221-212 majority, that made it relatively easy
for a single hard-right member, Representative Matt Gaetz, to call for
his ouster.
The second came on Saturday, when McCarthy opted to avert triggering a
partial government shutdown by introducing a stopgap funding bill that
passed the House with more Democratic than Republican votes.
Gaetz had been threatening to move against McCarthy for days at that
point, and a senior Republican told Reuters at the time that McCarthy
had concluded he would face a challenge to his leadership no matter what
he did.
"I want to keep government open while we finish our job," McCarthy told
reporters when he emerged from a closed-door Saturday morning party
meeting where he laid out that plan.
On Tuesday, eight members of his party joined 208 Democrats to oust
McCarthy as speaker in a 216-210 vote. McCarthy will continue as a
rank-and-file member of the House.
McCarthy, who had managed to smile through much of the Tuesday's ordeal,
soon chose not to stand again for the position and struck a gracious
tone at a press conference.
"I may have lost a vote today. But as I walk out of this chamber, I feel
fortunate to have served the American people," McCarthy, 58, told
reporters. "It was my greatest honor to be able to do it."
He had angered lawmakers of both parties during his time as speaker.
He steered a narrow majority, currently 221-212, through a long spring
standoff that saw the U.S. come perilously close to defaulting on its
$31.4 trillion in debt. Just a few months later, shutdown loomed.
Republican hardliners, cheered on by former President Donald Trump,
urged McCarthy to push harder against the Democratic-majority Senate and
President Joe Biden, to demand cuts to federal spending on domestic
social programs and other conservative priorities.
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U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) walks back to the Speaker's
office after a motion to vacate the chair of Speaker of the House
and end McCarthy's continued leadership passed by a vote of 216-210,
at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. October 3, 2023.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst /File Photo
Members of his own party repeatedly rejected measures McCarthy
brought to the floor.
Democrats, meanwhile, seethed after McCarthy backed out of a May
deal he had reached with Biden on spending levels for the fiscal
year that began Oct. 1, and grew angrier when he launched an
impeachment inquiry into Biden.
That move, Democrats contend, was meant as a reprisal for Trump's
historic two impeachments, both of which ended in acquittal on the
votes of Senate Republicans.
RUDDERLESS HOUSE
The House will now drift rudderless in the coming days, with a
potential shutdown in mid-November.
The episode demonstrated the formidable challenge that has
overshadowed the speaker's post for Republicans in recent years,
with John Boehner resigning the post in 2015 after a struggle with
rebellious conservatives.
Boehner's successor, Paul Ryan, a frequent target for conservatives,
decided not to seek reelection in 2018 as Trump shifted the party
focus from Ryan's fiscal priorities to immigration and culture-war
issues.
"Frankly, one has to wonder whether or not the House is governable
at all," Republican Representative Dusty Johnson told reporters
after McCarthy's ouster.
Lawmakers have pointed to several prominent Republicans as possible
successors to McCarthy: Majority Leader Steve Scalise, Republican
whip Tom Emmer, House Budget Chairman Jodey Arrington and
Representative Kevin Hern, who leads the conservative Republican
Study Committee.
The high point of McCarthy's tenure came in May when McCarthy
enjoyed a rare moment of victory by forcing Biden to negotiate a
deal on national debt that averted a default.
His masterstroke in getting Biden to the negotiating table had been
his decision to bring a Republican debt ceiling bill to the floor
and pass it in April with only the support of his own party members.
But hardliners soon used their leverage to shutter the House floor
in protest over the spending level that McCarthy had agreed to
Biden.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Stephen
Coates)
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