The news that Eric Cantor will step down as majority leader after his shock primary defeat Tuesday night threatened to rip open Republican wounds, unleashing a damaging and ideologically driven war of succession with the potential to wreak havoc on Capitol Hill.
But over the last 24 hours, GOP leaders have been working to ward off any cataclysmic intra-party showdown. And for now, at least, they’re succeeding.
Over the last few months, party leaders appeared to have mostly succeeded in beating back the tea party insurrection that has shaken the GOP in recent years: Senior Republicans in both the House and Senate had held off far-right challengers, and Speaker John Boehner had gained a measure of control over his fractious caucus.
But Cantor’s loss and resignation raised the prospect of an ugly battle between the tea party and the establishment to replace him. On the heels of Sen. Thad Cochran’s failure to defeat a tea party challenger in his own Mississippi primary, it looked to have put the wind back in the sails of conservative insurgents in Congress. One veteran GOP member worried it could unleash such “mayhem” that not only was immigration reform dead in the water, it would even be hard for the party to fulfill the basic functions of government. Democrats, eager to paint their opponents as extremists, gleefully stoked those fears. One well-sourced conservative reporter even suggested that with Cantor gone, Speaker John Boehner’s grip on power might be at risk too.
A day later, that kind of chaos and infighting is looking less likely.
In a statement released Thursday morning, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, a staunch conservative and tea party favorite, said that “after prayerful reflection,” he wouldn’t be seeking Cantor’s job. That appears to leave the field mostly clear for Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the Majority Whip. Even before Hensarling’s announcement, the fast-moving McCarthy said at a dinner with donors Wednesday night that he had lined up enough votes to win, Politico reported.
McCarthy still will likely face a challenge from Rep. Pete Sessions, who chairs the powerful Rules committee. But unlike Hensarling, Sessions, a former chair of the House Republicans’ campaign arm, isn’t expected to run an ideological campaign that aims to rally the caucus’s most conservative members to his banner. That means the party likely will be a spared the kind of divisive leadership fight that pits tea partiers against the current leadership.
As msnbc’s Chuck Todd put it Thursday morning: “With Kevin McCarthy, the message is: ‘Hey guys, this is not the time to have a public debate. We can have it after the midterms.’”
McCarthy, who represents a largely agricultural district in central California, is a Boehner ally, and he’s certainly no favorite of the grassroots activists who give the tea party much of its sway. In a blog post that went up Thursday morning, RedState’s Erick Erickson, an influential grassroots conservative leader, savaged McCarthy as “not a friend of conservatives.”
%22With%20Kevin%20McCarthy%2C%20the%20message%20is%3A%20%27Hey%20guys%2C%20this%20is%20not%20the%20time%20to%20have%20a%20public%20debate.%20We%20can%20have%20it%20after%20the%20midterms.%27%22′
“House Republicans looked on the biggest electoral surprise of the year and are giving it the middle finger,” Erickson wrote.









