There is a normal way in which the U.S. House of Representatives functions. Looking at how the institution has tackled its responsibilities this week, however, “normal” isn’t a word that comes to mind. NBC News reported:
The House voted 316-94 to tee up votes on four separate bills that include aid to Ukraine and Israel, a good sign for the prospects of Congress approving U.S. funding for the two countries after months of delay and partisan fighting. Speaker Mike Johnson, facing intense opposition from right-wing members, received crucial help from Democrats to move forward with the votes.
The first big step in this dramatic tale came last night when the security aid package was sent to the Rules Committee — sometimes called the “speaker’s committee” because the House speaker handpicks its members, who in turn advance his priorities.
In this instance, however, three Republicans on the panel — Kentucky’s Thomas Massie, South Carolina’s Ralph Norman, and Texas’ Chip Roy — balked. Ordinarily, that would’ve derailed the bill, but four Democrats on the Rules Committee rescued the GOP speaker’s bill, which is extremely unusual.
That set the stage for this morning’s procedural vote. Again, when the House is operating normally, the parties stick together on these rules votes, and the majority party’s leaders can expect the support of every member of their conference, even those who’ll ultimately vote against the bill on final passage.
This morning, however, 55 House Republicans defied their party’s leadership on the procedural vote, far more than would ordinarily be necessary to kill a proposal. But these far-right members failed to derail Johnson’s bill because 165 House Democrats voted with the GOP leadership — which is roughly 165 more votes that Johnson can usually count on when the chamber is holding a procedural vote.








