GreenGoo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 02, 2023 5:26 pm
Apollo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 02, 2023 1:50 pm
They're not helping him pass anything now either, and are actually making it harder to pass anything by tacking Far Right amendments onto legislation.
I don't understand your response. The dems aren't in any position to save him, and are even more likely to sink him by being associated with him.
He's tacking on amendments because he has no choice. Without those amendments he can't pass anything, with or without the dems help.
Honestly I'm not following your position. It seems like you're saying he chose far right instead of dems, and if he had chosen dems things would have been better for him?
How, exactly? He is completely powerless without that far right contingent. Adding Dems to the mix doesn't change anything.
I mean, they can save his job, but then what?
I don't understand your point either. By saving him the Dems get some stability in government that we don't have right now because McCarthy won't have to worry about his far right flank any time he tries to pass responsible legislation. They can also get some policy leverage over him, though obviously that's going to be limited. There's a large portion of the GOP that will vote to pass things like Debt limits or Fund Ukraine, but they need Democratic help to get them passed nowadays, thanks to a small group of far right house members. And since there's no consensus whatsoever on who would replace McCarthy anyway, kicking him out would just result in endless chaos (which Gaetz and the other Trumpists clearly want). If he says "No" to Democratic help in staying in office, he's gone anyway so if he really wants to stay speaker I don't see that he would have a choice. Either the Dems help McCarthy stay the speaker or we get total chaos and no one gets anything passed, and I know which one of those I would choose ten times out of ten.
I'm not claiming that we would be in a full-blown coalition government and that everything McCarthy introduced from that point on would be compromise legislation, just that he would be able to pass those Must Pass bills without Far Right shenanigans because he would know the Dems had his back. As long as the Dems support him when the Right tries to kick him out, he'll be fine unless almost every single GOP member votes against him. He's not going to pass anything but symbolic bills without help from the Democrat controlled Senate and a Democratic President anyway. And he can pass all those he wants to keep some of his base happy, as far as I am concerned.
You say he is completely powerless without that Far Right contingent. But did they vote for the Debt Limit increase? Did they vote to keep funding the Gov't? No, and yet he managed to override them. You say he needs those Far Right amendments, but none of those were on the final bill that passed and without them he'd likely be able to get more things passed. Not sure what your point is here other than he wouldn't do it because the GOP would no longer support him. But if he limits his work with Dems to absolutely Must Pass legislation, I don't think the majority of the GOP reps will turn on him, as they know the score in the House right now and they didn't turn on him after the Debt limit deal. There's a lot of animosity in the GOP caucus towards these hardliners already. Not to mention McCarthy puts his name in the history books as a politician who, under immense pressure, Did The Right Thing, which some folks still care about.
I know you have a point, I'm probably just not grasping exactly what you're trying to say. If my rambling response doesn't convince you, let me know in very specific terms what problem you have with the Dems supporting McCarthy in keeping his seat and I'll try to respond to that. Is it more of "this won't happen" or "this shouldn't happen"?