Forget about bipartisan cooperation–right now, Republicans can’t even get along with each other. GOP Congressman Tim Huelskamp called John Boehner’s actions “petty” and “vindictive” after the speaker bumped him from a committee. “What outrages me is if you don’t vote a certain way–whether you’re Republican or Democrat–you get punished in Washington D.C.,” he said on PoliticsNation.
Huelskamp was one of four congressmen kicked off committee assignments, a move that seemed tied to their refusal to vote with the party. That may be less a punishment, said some analysts, than an attempt by Speaker Boehner to clear the way for a budget deal.
Huelskamp says he’s received “no explanation from our leadership” on why he was kicked off the House Budget and Agricultural Committees, but says it’s “pretty clear” there was a “secret scorecard” on which he and his colleagues were being judged, and this move is retribution for not voting with Boehner. The Tea Party freshman refused to go as far as some conservative colleagues and join the #FireBoehner campaign, dodging a question about whether or not he’d support Boehner for Speaker again.
But he did criticize Boehner over the secretive nature of fiscal cliff negotiations, complaining that he and many of his colleagues have no idea what’s being bartered behind closed doors. “They’re sitting there making backroom deals,” he said. “They won’t tell either side what deal-making is going on and at the end of the day I don’t think that’s the way to make policy.”








