Now that he’s done spearheading the evidence-free impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, House Homeland Security Committee Chair Mark Green, R-Tenn., feels like his work is done. The third-term congressman announced Wednesday that he’ll not run for re-election in the fall, thereby continuing an exodus of senior Republicans from the House.
“Today, with the House having passed H.R. 2 and Secretary Mayorkas impeached, it is time for me to return home,” he said in a statement, referring to the House GOP’s harsh border security bill. But it’s not just his undeserved sense of accomplishment that’s compelling Green to leave. Green told Axios on Wednesday, “This place is so broken, and making a difference here is just you know, just it feels like a lot of something for nothing.”
It’s a true enough sentiment. But such a complaint is especially rich coming from Green given that it’s his party — his allies among the Freedom Caucus, in particular — that broke Congress so horribly. Since Republicans claimed a narrow majority in January 2023, the House’s course has been anything but smooth sailing. Between the near-constant crises and abysmally low number of bills that have become law, Congress has been struggling.
Such a complaint is especially rich coming from Green given that it’s his party — his allies among the Freedom Caucus, in particular — that broke Congress so horribly.
Green first won the committee’s gavel only at the start of the current Congress last year in a race with several other challengers. That he’s already giving it up would have been unthinkable a generation ago, when committee chairs clung to their fiefdoms for as long as possible. But he joins three other chairs of powerful committees in declining to run again this fall: Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., who leads the Financial Services Committee; Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee; and Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas, the head of the Appropriations Committee. (Granger is the only one who would be unable to keep her gavel if re-elected under the Republican conference’s internal rules.)
On one hand, this willingness to step down can be seen as a lingering effect of last century’s consolidation of power in the speakership and away from the once all-powerful chairs. Most major pieces of legislation in recent years have been the result of top-down negotiations among congressional leaders that rank-and-file members are then expected to support. It’s one of the most salient complaints that conservative Republicans have had about how the way the House is run should change.








