It’s been a week of unexpected events.
On Tuesday night, an unknown economics professor and political novice defeated the Republican Party’s Majority Leader, Rep. Eric Cantor, it was the first time a primary challenger had beat a majority leader since the job was created in 1899.
With Cantor out, suddenly all eyes are turned to the GOP’s number three guy, California’s Rep. Kevin McCarthy, to take Cantor’s job—and potentially, down the line, Rep. John Boehner’s.
Here are five things you need to know about the 49-year-old Republican as he works to shore up party support for the majority leader race on June 19th.
1. He’s an ambitious workaholic
In California back in 2004, the Democratic speaker of the state assembly got an odd phone call: McCarthy—then the top Republican in the state Assembly—was sitting in the speaker’s chair presiding over an otherwise empty chamber, according to The New Republic.
McCarthy would later tell the top Democrat he’d swung by the state capitol to try out his seat — to see what it would feel like when his party retook the majority. While McCarthy never ended up with that job, his quick ascension through the House of Representatives was no surprise.
McCarthy lives, breathes, and eats his job: he sleeps in his personal office, and has turned the majority whip’s offices into a hang-out spot for the party’s youngest members, many of whom also live in their offices, so much so the New York Times described it as an “airport frequent-flier lounge, complete with beer and wine.” According to the same story, McCarthy never dines alone: he uses every social event and meal as a chance to connect with party members.
2. He can wrangle the tea party – sometimes
Remember the 2011 Ryan budget plan that passed with all but four Republicans’ votes, despite having 2010’s rowdy tea party-filled freshman class to reckon with? You can thank McCarthy for that. Though the budget in its complete form — which would have axed federal, non-security discretionary spending to pre-Depression levels — went nowhere, it was an enormous sign of GOP unity in budget talks.
McCarthy is about as far from the tea party caucus as one can be: a career politician, he worked his way up through establishment ranks and was groomed to take his current seat when his mentor, the former House Ways and Means Committee chairman Bill Thomas, retired and paved the way for McCarthy’s rise to power, but he’s been able to earn their votes and attention when it comes to the party agenda.
His leadership has limits, though: several crucial votes have shown McCarthy’s weakness with the caucus, like last year’s Farm Bill, which was defeated when far-right Republicans declared the bill too expensive just as Democrats condemned the cuts to it too drastic.
3. He’s actually kinda for immigration
Immigration was Cantor’s downfall — his opponent hit the majority leader over his tentative support of immigration reform — but McCarthy is even farther to the left of Cantor on the issue. McCarthy supports creating a legal status for illegal immigrants.
“The principles aren’t combined or written out yet, but in my personal belief, I think you’ll go with legal status,” McCarthy told a hometown news station of the GOP’s immigration principles, currently being written by the party. “That it will allow you to work [and] pay your taxes.”
The anti-immigration group NumbersUSA, which advocates for a drastic reduction of the number of immigrants that are in the country and grades legislators, has given McCarthy the lowest possible grade on immigration for the current Congress, an F- or 0%. Cantor, for reference, had a 62% rating, a C+.
McCarthy’s only opponent in the majority race, Texas Rep. Pete Sessions, is “absolutely opposed to amnesty”; Numbers USA scores him favorably, with a 71%, a B grade.









