Washington Post (Opinion)
By EJ Dionne
July 29, 2015
If
you wonder why Congress is so feeble these days that it can’t even find
a simple way to pass a transportation bill, look no further than Rep.
Mark Meadows (R-N.C.),
who proffered a little resolution on Tuesday night to oust John Boehner
from the speakership.
The
move was quickly dismissed by Boehner loyalists as showboating by a
second-term member, and Meadows himself said he might not even seek a
vote on his own measure.
His hope is to provoke a “family conversation” among Republicans. It’s a
heck of a dysfunctional family. The GOP these days may have its
advantages on the Lannisters of “Game of Thrones” fame, but it’s a very
long way from the Brady Bunch.
Perhaps
by crushing Meadows’s insurrection, which many of even the most
rebellious right-wing Republicans thought was ill-timed, Boehner will
strengthen his hand. The
more likely outcome is that this resolution to “vacate the chair” will
once again remind Boehner of the nature of the party caucus over which
he presides. I use “preside” rather than “lead” precisely because his
difficulty in leading these folks is the heart
of his problem.
The
House GOP (and this applies more than it once did to Senate Republicans
as well) includes a large and vocal minority always ready to go over a
cliff and always ready
to burn — fortunately, figuratively — heretical leaders and colleagues.
More important, a significant group sympathizes with Boehner privately
but is absolutely petrified that having his back when things get tough
will conjure a challenge inside the party
by conservative ultras whose supporters dominate its primary electorate
in so many places.
This
means that Republicans have to treat doing business with President
Obama and the Democrats as something bordering on philosophical treason.
Yes, on trade, where Obama’s
position is relatively close to their own, they will help the president
out. But it’s very hard to find many other issues of that sort.
Politicians of nearly every kind used to agree that building roads,
bridges, mass-transit projects and airports was good
for everybody. Now, even pouring concrete and laying track can be
disrupted by weird ideological struggles.
The
text of Meadows’s anti-Boehner resolution is revealing. He complains
that the speaker has “caused the power of Congress to atrophy, thereby
making Congress subservient
to the Executive and Judicial branches, diminishing the voice of the
American people.” Actually, Congress has done a bang-up job of blocking
Obama’s agenda since Republicans won control of the House in 2010. How,
short of impeachment, is it supposed to do
more to foil the man in the White House?
Meadows
also hits Boehner for “intentionally” seeking voice votes (as opposed
to roll calls) on “consequential and controversial legislation to be
taken without notice
and with few Members present.” He has a point. But since so many
Republicans are often too timid to go on the record for the votes
required to keep government moving — they don’t want to be punished by
Meadows’s ideological friends — Boehner does what he has
to do.
On
the other hand, Meadows’s charge that Boehner is “bypassing the
majority of the 435 Members of Congress and the people they represent”
is absolutely true.
But
the logic of this legitimate protest is that Boehner should allow many
more votes on the floor in which a minority of Republicans could join
with a majority of Democrats
to pass legislation, thereby reflecting the actual will of the entire
House. If Boehner had done this with immigration reform, it would now be
a reality. Boehner didn’t do it precisely because he worried about what
Republicans of Meadows’s stripe would do
to him.
Meadows’s
move bodes ill for the compromising that will be required this fall to
avoid new crises on the debt ceiling and the budget. Republicans already
faced difficulties
on this front before the “vacate the chair” warning shot, as Post
blogger Greg Sargent noted Wednesday.
And
Rep. Walter B. Jones (R-N.C.), another Boehner critic, reacted to the
resolution by invoking the Lord Voldemort all Republicans fear. Jones
expressed the hope that
“the talk-show hosts who are so frustrated would pick up on this thing
and beat the drum.” It’s enough to ruin a speaker’s summer.
Republicans
are talking a good deal about the threat to their brand posed by Donald
Trump’s unplugged, unrestrained appeal to the party’s untamed side. The
bigger danger
comes from a Republican Congress that is having a lot of trouble
getting that governing thing down.
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