As House members left Capitol Hill yesterday, they’d endured a rather ridiculous day. Over the course of roughly eight hours, representatives-elect — they still haven’t been sworn in — voted five times for speaker, bringing the new total for the week to 11. Each of the tallies were effectively identical, and none brought House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy closer to the gavel he’s so desperate to hold.
As the process drags on in ways unseen since 1859, it seems inevitable that the California Republican has asked himself, likely more than once, how it is that his House Republican conference became so broken.
And while there’s plenty of blame to go around for the partisan catastrophe, as McCarthy takes stock, he should probably start with the man he sees in the mirror.
In a week filled with head-shaking political mishegas, The New York Times’ Michelle Goldberg wrote a column that stood out for me as important.
Kevin McCarthy nurtured the spirit of reactionary nihilism in the Republican Party, first by trying to harness the energy of the Tea Party for his own ambition, and then by his near-total capitulation to Donald Trump. … McCarthy’s approach to the far right has always been one of indulgence.
Or as my MSNBC colleague Michael Cohen summarized yesterday, “Kevin McCarthy did this to himself.”
The evidence is overwhelming. By way of his leadership post, McCarthy recruited radicals. And raised money for radicals. And co-opted radicals. And campaigned for radicals. And empowered radicals. And excused radicals, even as their extremism and hostility toward democracy became dangerous.
He did so, not because he necessarily agreed with them — McCarthy has few core beliefs or deeply held principles — but because the Republican leader believed they could help him advance his own personal ambitions.








