Monday, April 01, 2024

Republicans Are Seeking A Purge Of Noise!

It never Good.

Being insufferable has consequences.

Republicans are infighting.

House majority has more priorities than actually working on behalf the American people.

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC), Rep. Bob Good (R-VA), Rep. Majorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) are going to cost the Republicans the House majority.

Ken Buck left and Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI) will leave in three weeks.

In order to stop them, many House members are considering endorsing their primary opponents. 

Greene, being the most insufferable and laziest member of Congress, should be the Republican Party's top pick for a primary challenge. She has little accomplishments in Congress. She spends about 85% of her time outside her congressional district. She barely does anything if ever. When accomplishments do come to her district she takes credit for it despite voting against it. She served Congress since 2021 and has become one of the most known members.

Good, 58, who won his first race in 2020 by knocking off a moderate GOP incumbent, Denver Riggleman, is one of four Republicans who are being targeted by members from within their own conference. In the other cases, it’s far-right Republicans maneuvering to take out colleagues they view as insufficiently conservative.

Now, it’s the center-right striking back – including allies of McCarthy and a new GOP outside group beginning to attack Good as well.

Asked if Good’s vote to oust McCarthy prompted the House GOP effort to defeat him, Georgia Rep. Austin Scott said: “It has something to do with that. But more important than that, I think, we’ve got a guy who would be a good member of our team,” referring to McGuire.

Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-WI) decided to endorse his opponent. He angling to knock Good off in his June primary by propping up his primary opponent, John McGuire – a tactic long viewed as a serious breach of protocol but one that underscores the bad blood within the House GOP.

“Bob Good didn’t come here to govern. He came here to be famous,” Van Orden, a Wisconsin Republican, told CNN. “Bob Good’s wearing our jersey, and he’s not on the team.”

Van Orden added: “If you look at what we have not been able to accomplish in this Congress, it’s predominantly because of Bob Good and his ilk.”

But Good is undeterred.

As he barnstormed through his district last week with fellow House GOP hardliners, such as Reps. Matt Gaetz of Florida, Andy Biggs of Arizona and Chip Roy of Texas, Good said voters in his district don’t care what his colleague from Wisconsin thinks. And he pointedly accused many of his Republican colleagues in Washington of casting votes that hurt the country and undermine the conservative cause.

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