It didn’t feel possible after three straight weeks of chaos, but the House finally elected a new speaker: Rep. Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana in his fourth term. The erstwhile vice chair of the GOP Conference won over the entirety of his caucus Wednesday. As a result, he ended up with more support in one ballot than his predecessor, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., got even in the 15th and final round of voting in January.
Given the messiness of the last 10 months, one tends to forget that electing a speaker is usually the easiest part of being in the majority. (McCarthy’s difficulties winning the gavel and his eventual ouster are historical outliers.) What Johnson now faces, though, is a set of challenges that represent the next lowest bar, one that McCarthy was unable to overcome: keeping the federal government funded.
What Johnson now faces, though, is a set of challenges that represent the next lowest bar, one that McCarthy was unable to overcome: keeping the federal government funded.
In fairness, it’s been a long time since Congress, under either party, has been great at that job. It’s been almost 30 years since all 12 appropriations bills have passed through regular order and before the end of the previous fiscal year. The current fiscal year started Oct. 1, but the government is running on a short-term continuing resolution that keeps the lights on at the same levels as the previous year’s appropriations.
For the far-right members who had been hammering away at him for months, McCarthy’s role in passing that short-term fix was the straw that broke the camel’s back. They said the continuing resolution was a betrayal of promises he’d made them to fund the government only through the formal appropriations process. Even worse, in their eyes, he committed the cardinal sin of passing it by relying mostly on Democratic votes.
McCarthy had already caved in to their demands that the topline spending be below his deal with President Joe Biden, a deal that Johnson also supported but that was clearly beside the point for them. So was the fact that it was the chaos caucus’ own nebulous, hyperpartisan demands that had slowed down the process, blocking several of the appropriations bills from passing. That far-right members had also tanked a version of the resolution that also included a harsh border security bill was never even mentioned. McCarthy had gone back on his word, they said, and for that, he had to go.
When it was passed on Sept. 30, the short-term spending bill was pegged to expire on Nov. 17, but the GOP’s protracted clown show has eaten up roughly half that time. Ahead of Wednesday’s vote on the House floor, Johnson released a letter that lays out a timeline for how he plans to get things done over the next few weeks, and it’s definitely an ambitious schedule. Before McCarthy’s ouster, the GOP had passed four spending bills. Johnson is proposing to pass the Energy and Water appropriations bill this week and three more next week. Two more would pass the week after that, and finally the last two bills, including the Agriculture, Rural Development and Food and Drug Administration appropriations bill, right before the deadline hits.
That’s a lot to get done at any time. It’s especially a lot to accomplish when the last of those bills has already come up for a vote and failed, mostly thanks to moderates opposed to a provision that would restrict access to abortion pills. The bills would also have to make it through the Senate, not known for its speed, before making their way to Biden’s desk.








