House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., owes me financial compensation for the amount of whiplash he put me through this weekend. After 16 years in Washington, almost all of which have been spent in House leadership, he should have known good and well that, given the intransigence of his caucus’s far-right flank, the only real solution to avoid a government shutdown was to put up a bill that Democrats could support. That he finally did so at the risk of his speakership is more than I expected of him — and it previewed a possible shift in McCarthy’s approach to his particular dilemma.
For weeks now, as a shutdown grew more and more likely, the only strategy that McCarthy had pursued was to pass long-term funding bills with exclusively Republican support. With a narrow majority and a slew of members in open revolt, the drafts that came to the floor were packed with deep cuts to federal spending and policy riders to appease the far-right flank of his caucus. This strategy was meant to show a unified Republican front when the time came to negotiate with President Joe Biden and the Democratic-controlled Senate on final versions of the bills.
For weeks now, as a shutdown grew more and more likely, the only strategy that McCarthy had pursued was to pass long-term funding bills with exclusively Republican support.
That was the idea (in theory, anyway), but that theory was based on a fundamentally flawed assumption: that McCarthy’s future success hinged on a negotiation in which these bills passed the House with only Republican support; in which Democrats conceded to all the provisions that brought the conservative Republicans on board; in which Senate Democrats held their nose and voted to fund the government at deeply reduced levels; and in which Biden didn’t use his veto. In other words, a total victory for McCarthy and the far right.
I can’t overemphasize how much of a pipe dream McCarthy’s original sad excuse of a plan was, even before this weekend. It’s true that the House has passed more long-term spending bills than the Senate (four as of Monday afternoon to the Senate’s none), but it’s a hollow victory. The Senate Appropriations Committee has already passed all 12 spending bills, with major bipartisan majorities for each of them, but their passage in the full Senate was delayed while scrambling senators focused on a stopgap bill. Meanwhile, several of the House’s spending bills initially failed to garner the full support of McCarthy’s own party, until he made them even more toxic to Democrats and more appealing to his far-right members.
The House then failed to pass a continuing resolution Friday, even with deep cuts to spending and with an extreme border security bill attached. That short-term spending bill, which would have funded the government for an extra month at sharply reduced levels, went down in flames with 21 Republicans voting against it. It was that failure that caused McCarthy to shift gears. The bill that would eventually pass, which keeps spending at current levels for the next 45 days and includes additional disaster relief but no new funding for aid to Ukraine, was filed Friday night. It was only in a GOP conference meeting Saturday morning, after lining up moderates to speak in support of a stopgap measure, that McCarthy revealed his play.
Democrats were skeptical at the last-minute shift, and rightly so, given that McCarthy had squandered any good faith by reneging on his earlier deal with Biden on spending levels. But in the end, the bill passed overwhelmingly — 335-91 — with 90 Republicans, or about 40% of those voting, opting to reject it, and all Democrats but one supporting it. In effect, the result was the same as if McCarthy had just gotten out of the way of Democrats governing in the first place.








