In political terms, Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s slip-up this week when he suggested that the goal of the House’s special Benghazi committee was to damage Hillary Clinton was about as big as it gets. But the Majority Leader’s comments seem unlikely to derail his bid to be speaker.
There’s no question McCarthy handed Democrats a massive gift. On Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid called for the Benghazi panel to be disbanded in light of McCarthy’s comments, and Clinton called them “deeply distressing.”
Speaker John Boehner had to do damage control. “This investigation has never been about former Secretary of State Clinton and never will be,” Boehner, who will step down later this month, said in a statement Thursday.
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And McCarthy himself tried Thursday for the second time in as many days to walk his remarks back, telling Fox News’s Bret Baier: “This committee was set up for one sole purpose: to find the truth on behalf of the families for four dead Americans. Now, I did not intend to imply in any way that that work is political. Of course it is not. Look at the way they have carried themselves out.”
But McCarthy also told Baier he predicts he’ll still become the next speaker. And right now, that looks a pretty safe bet.
Despite the scale of the Majority Leader’s unforced error, few voices in the party are suggesting his Benghazi comments will hamper his bid for the top job when the 247-person GOP caucus votes next Thursday.
To be sure, some conservative Republican members have been scathing about McCarthy’s too-candid remarks, in which he told Fox News’s Sean Hannity Tuesday: “Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was unbeatable…But we put together a Benghazi special committee,” and now “her numbers are dropping.”
McCarthy “needs to reread the job description of speaker of the House if he thinks it’s to bring hearings that help us denigrate Democrats that are running for president,” Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie.
Rep. Justin Amash suggested the remarks could threaten McCarthy’s candidacy. “I think it’s a concern,” Amash said Wednesday.
And in a blog post earlier this week titled “You Want This Guy as Speaker?”, Erick Erickson, a key conservative activist, wrote that McCarthy had “handed Hillary Clinton a campaign commercial and gave the left-media their newest talking point.”








