Seasoned, moderate Republicans are sparring publicly with their junior, far right colleagues, bringing the party’s internal disputes to the Senate floor and adding a new layer of partisanship to an already gridlocked chamber.
The budget debate incited divisive intra-party squabbling as Tea Party senators looked to obstruct ordinary budget processes last week.
Sen. Susan Collins, a Maine Republican, and Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain sparred with freshmen Republicans demands on a potential conference between the House and Senate to reconcile the two chambers’ disparate budget proposals.
Four Tea Party-backed junior senators—Ted Cruz of Texas, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Mike Lee of Utah, and Marco Rubio of Florida—have demanded a promise that any delegation wouldn’t agree to raising the debt ceiling as part of such a conference, blocking the Senate’s attempt to appoint conferees which is done by unanimous vote.
The demand of a condition “that happens to be important to a small group…will paralyze the process,” McCain said. “Obviously you can predict the outcome.”
He criticized Lee for characterizing such a conference as a back-room, closed-door deal, reminding him that any deal struck would have to be voted on by the chambers.
“Maybe the senator from Utah ought to learn a little bit more about how business has been done in the Congress of the United States,” he said angrily.
Below, watch the C-SPAN video edited by Talking Points Memo.
On Wednesday, McCain and Cruz butted heads again on the budget after McCain criticized Cruz for not trusting his party to act responsibly. Cruz doubled down on the criticism.
“Let me be clear: I don’t trust the Republicans. And I don’t trust the Democrats,” Cruz said.









