Conservatives push McCarthy to spending brink despite impeachment inquiry
CNN/Stylemagazine.com Newswire | 9/13/2023, 12:55 p.m.
Originally Published: 13 SEP 23 12:45 ET
By Lauren Fox and Haley Talbot, CNN
(CNN) — House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s announcement of an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden has done little to quell his troubles in the spending showdown with House conservatives, setting up a potential clash with his right flank that could force the speaker to choose between keeping the government open and keeping his job.
“It looks like conservatives have separated the two issues,” Rep. Richard Hudson, a North Carolina Republican and the leader of the GOP’s campaign arm, told CNN.
Just a day after Republicans returned to Washington after a six-week recess there is no consensus among House Republicans on the best path forward to fund the government with some in McCarthy’s right flank threatening they could oust him if he brings a clean spending bill to the floor. Even a standalone defense spending bill hangs in the balance as some members have threatened to vote against a procedural step to bring it to the floor this week.
“The margins are thin,” Rep. Steve Womack, an Arkansas Republican and member of the House Appropriations Committee, said. “We’ve got work to do.”
It’s an inflection point that has been months in the making, but will face a critical deadline at the end of the month when the government runs out of money and McCarthy may be forced to decide between bringing a short-term spending bill to the floor that can pass the Democratic-controlled Senate and pass it with a large number of Democratic votes or advance something that may unite House conservatives but would be dead on arrival in the Senate.
Some Senate Republicans had believed opening an impeachment inquiry could give McCarthy some political cover to cut a deal to keep the government funded even in the short term.
“It gives them additional tools to gather data, but it also keeps his folks basically together. He needs them together to do appropriations. He needs them together to do the (annual National Defense Authorization Act legislation) and so forth and as long as he is moving them, and they feel as though he is listening to their concerns, maybe he can get some of those items out and get it to the point where we can work with him in the Senate,” said Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota.
In the House, that is not at all how it has played out.
“I really think they are independent of each other,” Oklahoma Republican Rep. Stephanie Bice said. “I think the inquiry is something some of the members think is the next best step. Impeachment is a serious issue and none of us take that lightly. The appropriations discussion, I think is different. Many of our members want to see spending cuts. They are passionate about making sure we are funding certain things and not funding others and that is where I think the fight comes in right now.”
Veteran appropriator Rep. Tom Cole, also from Oklahoma, said opening an impeachment inquiry has only a “marginal” impact on McCarthy’s ability to earn some goodwill with conservatives in the conference, but that, “I don’t think it is it in itself going to shake things lose.”
Conservatives were quick to make it clear they aren’t going to give in on spending and pass a short term stopgap measure continuing funding, called a “continuing resolution” or CR, just because McCarthy has ramped up the investigations into President Joe Biden and his son Hunter.
“I’m a hell no on a clean CR, and there are many people who agree,” Rep. Lauren Boebert, a conservative from Colorado, told CNN.
“I think Speaker McCarthy has a path to choose. Does he pass Republican legislation that advances our policies and cuts spending with a Republican majority, Republican votes, or does he pass legislation with Democrat votes that lets down the American people?” Rep. Bob Good of Virginia, told CNN.
The uncertainty over how to fund the government was the focus of a private GOP conference meeting Tuesday morning with the speaker pitching his members that they need to stay united if they are going to have the best possible hand in negotiations with the Senate. At the moment, it is not entirely clear what will unite a disparate conference even as some swing state Republicans are pleading with their leaders to pass a continuing resolution that keeps government funded past September 30.
“There are some folks challenging (McCarthy), but there are 180 to 200 of us maybe more that will support him for 15 more votes or 50 more votes,” Rep. Don Bacon, a Republican from a Nebraska swing district, told CNN. “I don’t think we should cater to the threats all the time. Let’s do the right thing. We already have an agreement with the President that the far majority of the conference supported. We should live within that agreement.”
House Republican leadership was hoping to put a series of standalone spending bills on the floor over the next two weeks to try and build consensus and unite the conference, but it’s been a gamble. Already this week, leadership is scrambling to pass a defense spending bill with one member of the House Freedom Caucus Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina voting against the bill in the Rules Committee and another Rep. Dan Bishop of North Carolina telling CNN he would vote against the rule on the floor. Both the debate and the scheduled votes were pulled minutes before the chamber was due to gavel in Wednesday.
In an illustration of the challenges ahead, just over an hour after McCarthy announced he was launching an impeachment inquiry on Tuesday, Rep. Matt Gaetz went to the floor and threatened to oust McCarthy if he failed to comply with a series of demands including a demand that McCarthy not come forward with a so-called clean stopgap funding measure.
“I rise today to serve notice,” Gaetz said Tuesday on the House floor. “Mr. Speaker you are out of compliance with the agreement that allowed you to assume this role. The path forward for the House of Representatives is to either bring you into immediate and total compliance or remove you pursuant to a motion to vacate the chair.”
Members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, many of whom made clear last month they wouldn’t support a short-term spending bill without a series of concessions including cutting significant spending and passing a border security bill, held a nearly hour-long news conference outside the Capitol Tuesday afternoon, doubling down on their position.
“We’re not interested in continuing resolution that continues the policies and spending of the Biden-Schumer-Pelosi era. And we’re not going to vote for it. We didn’t vote for it last December and we’re not gonna vote for it now.” Rep. Scott Perry, a Republican from Pennsylvania and the chairman of the Freedom Caucus, told CNN.
Other conservatives went even further.
“It’s time for some leadership,” Bishop told CNN warning that a clean continuing resolution on the floor could trigger him to join with others to oust McCarthy. “It depends what more than one person thinks. I am already where I am on the subject. I think there has to be a reckoning.”
While many conservatives have stopped short of saying they would vote to remove McCarthy from his position if he advanced a short-term spending bill, it only takes one member to unleash what could be a paralyzing episode for McCarthy’s leadership and if Democrats all voted in favor of ousting McCarthy, it would only take five Republicans to remove him.
Privately, leadership’s message to Republicans has been that keeping the government funded and open is essential to ensuring the House GOP conference can keep up their investigations into the president and his son. That message is only expected to intensify in the days ahead. The optics of subpoenaing documents, bringing in witnesses and moving ahead with impeachment amid a shutdown, would be politically risky and could endanger members on the front lines of reelection who have already been on the fence about taking the step of opening an impeachment inquiry.
McCarthy’s choice now mirrors the one McCarthy had to make months ago on a deal to raise the nation’s debt ceiling when conservatives assailed the speaker for cutting a deal with the White House that raised the country’s borrowing limit, but members of the House Freedom Caucus argued did not go far enough to rein in the country’s debt.
“The speaker is in a very tough position because if he goes too far and he has to bring in Democrats then Republicans say ‘we’re gonna cut you,’ and then if he doesn’t go far enough then he loses some moderate Republicans,” said Tennessee Republican Rep. Tim Burchett. “But he’s like Tony Soprano. He just keeps surviving.”