Republicans lost a bruising battle with little to show for it. Their approval ratings dropped to all-time lows, their anti-Obamacare quest that stemmed the debacle in the first place ended in utter failure, and throughout the 16-day shutdown, a war began brewing between Republicans and an unlikely opponent: other Republicans.
The debate over how to end the shutdown pit hardcore conservatives against the more moderate Republicans, presenting a major challenge for the GOP ahead of next year’s midterm elections. Here’s a sampling of some of their infighting:
Just about every moderate Republican vs. Ted Cruz (and Mike Lee)
As the public and most prominent face of the shutdown effort, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz (and Utah Sen. Mike Lee, to a lesser extent) bore the brunt of the attacks from those within the GOP who supported a less stalwart solution.
The backlash to Cruz began before the shutdown started, and only got worse as time passed.
At a private lunch meeting shortly after the government was shuttered, Republican senators, including Kelly Ayotte, Dan Coats, and Ron Johnson, “assailed” Cruz, according to a New York Times report. Ayotte was reportedly “furious” with Cruz, and one senator described the meeting as “a lynch mob.”
Grover Norquist, the anti-tax Republican who’s rarely known as a moderate, accused Cruz of dragging his party “across broken glass for no purpose” with his doomed plan to destroy the Affordable Care Act.
“Ted Cruz and the people around him said that anyone who didn’t follow his direction on this was a Nazi appeaser,” Norquist told Newsmax TV.
“It’s time for someone to act like a grown-up in this process,” former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu argued, faulting Cruz and Tea Party Republicans in the House as much as President Barack Obama for taking an uncompromising stance.
New York Rep. Peter King became one of Cruz’s loudest opponents.
“I think it’s important for Republican leaders around the country to speak out against him and neutralize him,” King said of Cruz, according to Buzzfeed. “Otherwise he’s going to start the same nonsense again in December or January. He’s the guy that caused this, he’s the guy who is a fraud because he never had a strategy to begin with. And if we let him do it again, it’s our fault.”
King also told Fox News, just before the shutdown began, “I’m tired of having Ted Cruz call the shots for the House Republicans.”
Fox News host Megyn Kelly acknowledge the backlash succinctly in her interview with Cruz last week, asking “What’s it like to be the most hated man in America?”
News of Arizona Sen. John McCain’s hatred of Cruz leaked out before the whole debacle began, and didn’t seem to have abated as it ended.
“I think it’s obvious that we are now seeing the end of this agonizing odyssey that this body has been put through, but far more importantly, the American people have been put through,” he said Wednesday. “It’s one of the more shameful chapters that I have seen in the years that I have spent here in the Senate.”
Louie Gohmert vs. John McCain
Perhaps the most biting of all battles came between Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert and McCain.
Gohmert blasted McCain at last weekend’s Value Voters Summit, accusing him of supporting al Qaeda in Syria.
McCain snapped back Wednesday night when asked about Gohmert’s remarks in an interview with Brian Williams on NBC’s Nightly News.









