For one brief moment, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., must have thought things were going his way. He had managed to hammer out a deal with President Joe Biden that avoided disastrous default on the country’s debt yet won the support of the vast majority of his caucus. And then came last week’s backlash from the right, paralyzing the House floor and leaving McCarthy’s leadership team sniping at one another over who was to blame.
What was striking about the rebellion — which was at least temporarily resolved this week — is how effective it was in blockading GOP priorities, even though less than a dozen members took part. At the start of McCarthy’s speakership, it was clear that the far right would be a threat to his success, but last week’s rebels were only a small part of the 43-member House Freedom Caucus. And this “chaos caucus” has promised that it won’t let up on McCarthy until its demands are met. Just don’t ask exactly what those demands are.
As I wrote last week, discontent over the debt ceiling deal led 11 Republicans to join with Democrats in blocking a so-called special rule that would have allowed a set of bills about protecting gas stoves to jump to the top of the House’s legislative agenda. The bills themselves are relatively inconsequential, since they won’t pass the Democratic-led Senate or get Biden’s signature. But the rebels’ votes were meant to vent their anger that McCarthy had dared to compromise on the House’s original debt ceiling plan and its massive spending cuts. Some chaos caucus members also claimed that McCarthy reneged on promises he made when he was seeking the speakership in January, such as consulting with the far right during the debt ceiling negotiations and keeping its priorities at the forefront of the House’s must-pass bills this year.
What was striking about the rebellion is how effective it was in blockading GOP priorities, even though less than a dozen members took part.
The final debt deal included a set of caps on military and domestic spending that are pegged to the current fiscal year. The chaos caucus — which includes Reps. Matt Gaetz of Florida and Chip Roy of Texas in its ranks — insists that those caps be treated as a ceiling with room for further cuts, rather than as a target to be met. That’s not at all how Democrats see the deal, and it would surely prompt a clash down the road that could make the appropriations process much, much more difficult. For now, though, McCarthy seems willing to play ball. He emerged from an hourlong meeting with the rebels on Monday to announce a tentative deal that allowed the gas stoves bills and a few others to reach the floor.
But in a repeat of closed-door haggling in January, neither side was willing to say exactly what had been agreed to. It’s a risky choice, given how much of a headache it has been for the GOP leadership as Gaetz, Roy and others have repeatedly accused McCarthy of violating the terms of the January agreement. If the far right doesn’t like what it sees, another takeover of the House floor remains firmly on the table. Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., stressed as much, promising that “there’s gonna be fights. There’s a lot more fights down the road.”
We can at least assume that Monday’s agreement was a factor in the announcement by House Appropriations Committee Chair Kay Granger, R-Texas, later that night that her committee would be marking up spending bills pegged to fiscal year 2022, rather than this year. In total, that would result in $119 billion below the spending caps McCarthy and Biden agreed to, according to Roll Call.
It’s a win for the chaos caucus — but even those reductions might not be enough to satisfy its push for even deeper cuts. And beyond “less spending,” it’s not entirely clear what it wants. It’s the far-right version of a bargaining position that Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., brought to negotiations over the Biden economic agenda. While I was frustrated with Sinema’s focus on the topline number — “big number get smaller,” as I put it at the time — at least that was a debate over how many more people the government could help. The chaos caucus members want that number to shrink substantially, no matter how many of their constituents it hurts.








