It’s not just the Tea Party that can launch a revolt.
Establishment conservatives are in an uproar, too, since they watched Sen. Ted Cruz drive Republicans through budget negotiations that ended in a 16-day government shutdown and left the party tanking in the polls.
The Chamber of Commerce has had enough of Cruz’s antics and so has a big money group linked to Karl Rove, American Crossroads–and they’re both gearing up to play in Republican primary races across the country.
Combined the two groups represent the establishment and business wings of the Republican Party, who are fighting back in what’s become a full blown civil war ahead of the 2014 midterm elections.
“I sort of think about [Cruz] as a tennis player,” said Tom Donohue, the Chamber’s president and CEO.
“If you’re going to rush to the net all the time, you better have a lot of motion to the left and the right. And he hasn’t proved that to me, yet.”
And while Donohue said he’d work with Cruz to get work done, when asked if the business community would like it if the Texas senator would stand down, he said: “That might be one thing we could work on.”
But don’t expect the Chamber to call for the head of sitting Republican legislators—even the ones who agitated for a shutdown over Obamacare. Rep. Raul Labrador, for example, was an adamant member of the defund camp and voted against the final deal to reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling. But just last year, he received the Chamber’s “Spirit of Enterprise” award, based on his voting record, and the Chamber suggested that members like Labrador would make it up to them in the near future on other key issues.
“I’ll give them the benefit of the doubt that before we’re finished, they’re going to look for ways to help the business community,” Donohue said.
“We’re not the Debt-Ceiling Limit Association of America,” R. Bruce Josten, a Chamber of Commerce executive vice president added.
The Chamber has signaled its interest in a special election in Alabama’s first district, which has a primary run-off on November 5and a general election a month later. The GOP run-off is pitting an establishment Republican candidate, Bradley Byrne, against a Tea Party underdog, Dean Young.
Though the Chamber hasn’t endorsed any candidate in the election to replace Rep. Jo Bonner, who resigned in August, Byrne would be the obvious choice: He’s a former state legislator and business lawyer who’s promised to support infrastructure projects-a major priority for the Chamber-and reach across the aisle. By contrast, Young is a hardline conservative who believes “we are witnessing the end of the Western Christian empire” and who said he would have voted down the debt ceiling. The Chamber says it’s watching the race closely. “I think we’re probably actively interested in it,” said Bruce Josten, the Chamber’s chief lobbyist, said on Monday, though he declined to elaborate upon the group’s specific plans. “Why would I telegraph to every adversary in the political world-‘here’s what we’re planning to do in Alabama’?”









