Speaker no more. |
It is an ugly reminder that your taxpayer dollars are constitutionally allocated to elected members of Congress. The noise of 90 House and 20 Senate members easily outweighs the majority of actually hard working elected members who stay out of the cable news bubble.
Members who actually take pictures with constituents. Members who actually vote on issues that affect their district or state. They are not chasing for clout. They are not pulling fire alarms. They are not groping their romantic partners. They are not podcasting. They are not frequently on Fox, MSNBC, CNN, NewsNation or talk radio.
Members who lay low are actually doing their jobs.
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) is by far one of the most laziest members of Congress. He has no accomplishments and is currently under federal watch for unethical behavior with underage constituents.
He finally made good on his promise of removing Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) as House Speaker because he kept the government open with the help of Democrats. McCarthy took the threat seriously. A government shutdown will impact millions and Republicans certainly get blamed.
On Tuesday, Gaetz for a resolution to vacate which means that more than 1 member can formally remove McCarthy from his position. Which he succeeded.
It’s the end of the political line for McCarthy, who has said repeatedly that he never gives up, but found himself with almost no options remaining. Neither the right-flank Republicans who engineered his ouster nor the Democrats who piled on seem open to negotiating.
McCarthy told lawmakers in the evening he would not run again for speaker, putting the gavel up for grabs. Next steps are highly uncertain with no obvious successor to lead the House Republican majority. Action is halted in the House until next week, when Republicans try to elect a new speaker.
“I may have lost this vote today, but as I walk out of this chamber I feel fortunate to have served,” McCarthy said at a press conference at the Capitol, alternating between upbeat assessment of his speakership and angry score-settling of those who ousted him.
Still, he said, “I wouldn’t change a thing.”
McCarthy’s chief rival, Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, orchestrated the rare vote on the obscure “motion to vacate,” and pushed ahead swiftly into a dramatic afternoon roll call.
While McCarthy enjoyed support from most Republicans in his slim majority, eight Republican detractors — many of the same hard-right holdouts who tried to stop him from becoming speaker in January — essentially forced him out.
Stillness fell as the presiding officer gaveled the vote closed, 216-210, saying the office of the speaker “is hereby declared vacant.”
Moments later, a top McCarthy ally, Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., took the gavel and, according to House rules, was named speaker pro tempore, to serve in the office until a new speaker is chosen.
The House then briskly recessed as lawmakers met privately to discuss the path forward.
It was a stunning moment for McCarthy, a punishment fueled by growing grievances but sparked by his weekend decision to work with Democrats to keep the federal government open rather than risk a shutdown.
But in many ways, McCarthy’s ouster was set in motion when, in deal-making with hard-right holdouts at the start of the year, he agreed to a series of demands — including a rules change that allowed any single lawmaker to file the motion to vacate.
As the House fell silent, Gaetz, a top ally of Donald Trump, rose to offer his motion.
Leaders tried to turn it back, but the vote was 218-208, with 11 Republicans against tabling the motion, a sign of trouble to come.
The House then opened a floor debate unseen in modern times, and Republicans argued publicly among themselves for more than an hour.
“It’s a sad day,” Republican Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma said as debate got underway, urging his colleagues not to plunge the House Republican majority “into chaos.”
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