San Diego Union-Tribune

NEXT BIG TASK: VOTE ON HOUSE RULES

Speaker McCarthy’s concession­s to GOP hard-liners tested

- BY HOPE YEN & LISA MASCARO Associated Press writer Josh Boak contribute­d to this report. Yen and Mascaro write for The Associated Press.

After an epic 15-ballot election to become House speaker, Republican Kevin McCarthy faces his next big test in governing a fractious, slim majority: passing a rules package to govern the House.

The drafting and approval of a set of rules is normally a fairly routine legislativ­e affair, but in these times, it’s the next showdown for the embattled McCarthy.

To become speaker and win over skeptics, McCarthy had to make concession­s to a small group of hard-liners who refused to support his ascension until he yielded to their demands.

Now those promises — or at least some of them — are being put into writing to be voted on when lawmakers return this week for their first votes as the majority party.

On Sunday, at least two moderate Republican­s expressed their reservatio­ns about supporting the rules package, citing what they described as secret deals and the disproport­ionate power potentiall­y being handed out to a group of 20 conservati­ves.

The concession­s included limits on McCarthy’s power, such as by allowing a single lawmaker to initiate a vote to remove him as speaker and curtailing government spending, which could include defense cuts. They also give the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus more seats on the committee that decides which legislatio­n reaches the House floor.

They also raise questions about whether McCarthy can garner enough support from Republican­s, who hold a 222-212 edge, on a critical vote in the coming months to raise the debt limit, given conservati­ves’ demand that there first be significan­t spending cuts, over opposition from the White House and a Democratic-controlled Senate.

Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., a strong McCarthy supporter, said she currently is “on the fence” about the proposed rules.

“I like the rules package,” Mace said, in reference to what has been released publicly. “What I don’t support is a small number of people trying to get a deal done or deals done for themselves in private, in secret.”

She said it will be hard to get anything done in the House if a small band is given a stronger hand compared with the larger number of moderates. “I am concerned that commonsens­e legislatio­n will not get through to get a vote on the floor,” she said.

Rep. Tony Gonzales, RTexas, said he was an outright “no” against the rules package, decrying an “insurgency caucus” that he said would cut defense spending and push extremist legislatio­n, such as on immigratio­n.

Democrats are expected to be united against the package.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, a member of the Freedom Caucus who is expected to lead the House Judiciary Committee, defended the concession­s McCarthy made and said he believes the rules package will get enough Republican support to pass. He insisted that the agreements will help ensure broader representa­tion on committees and will curtail unfettered government spending.

“We’ll see tomorrow,” he said, but “I think we’ll get the 218 votes needed to pass the rules package.”

In the coming months, Congress will have to work to raise the debt limit before the government reaches its borrowing cap or face a devastatin­g default on payments, including those for Social Security, military troops and federal benefits such as food assistance. Lawmakers will also have to fund federal agencies and programs for the next budget year, which begins Oct. 1.

The White House has rejected Republican calls to slash spending in return for an increase in the federal government’s borrowing authority. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre went so far on Sunday as to call House Republican­s’ likely demands “hostage taking” that would risk default, an event that could trigger an economic crisis.

“Congress is going to need to raise the debt limit without — without — conditions and it’s just that simple,” Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One as President Joe Biden flew to Texas. “Attempts to exploit the debt ceiling as leverage will not work. There will be no hostage taking.”

Yet the White House also said it had no plans to sidestep the needed congressio­nal approval through possible budget gimmicks such as the minting of a coin to help cover a deficit that could be roughly $1 trillion this fiscal year.

Jordan argued that “everything has to be on the table” when it comes to spending cuts, including in defense, in light of the government’s $32 trillion debt.

 ?? MATT ROURKE AP ?? House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, gesturing toward the newly installed nameplate at his office, had to concede to demands of a small group of GOP hard-liners to win their support in the 15th ballot early Saturday.
MATT ROURKE AP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, gesturing toward the newly installed nameplate at his office, had to concede to demands of a small group of GOP hard-liners to win their support in the 15th ballot early Saturday.

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