After the vote that ended Kevin McCarthy’s tenure as House speaker, Republicans met for a closed-door meeting. By all accounts, nothing of great significance transpired at the gathering, though the ousted GOP leader told his colleagues he would not try to reclaim the gavel.
After the meeting, Axios reported that the House Republican members were “distraught, furious and concerned for the future of their party.” Rep. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota added, “Frankly, one has to wonder whether the House is governable at all.”
The frustration is understandable. The observation is not.
We know the House remains a “governable” institution because recent memory tells us so. In the most recent Congress, spanning 2021 and 2022, then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi racked up a series of legislative successes with a small majority that was identical in size to the one McCarthy failed to manage.
At no point during Pelosi’s tenure — or more to the point, either of Pelosi’s tenures — did it occur to any of her Democratic members to say, “Frankly, one has to wonder whether the House is governable at all.”








