House Freedom Caucus in Uproar Over Ukraine Funding Bill and Shock Move to Stop Vacate-the-Chair Votes

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

The House GOP Caucus seems on the verge of open civil war as the House Rules Committee debates the rule for voting on the foreign aid bills Speaker Johnson has pledged to bring to a vote on Saturday.

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BACKGROUND: Speaker Johnson Establishes Rules for Israel/Taiwan/Ukraine Aid Bills; Vote Set for Saturday


There are two key issues underlying the perhaps irrevocable break between the House GOP caucus and the Freedom Caucus.

The first issue is that Speaker Johnson will pass a rule to govern the vote with Democrat votes. The partisan split on the rules committee is nine Republicans and four Democrats. Johnson's problem is that three Republican members have declared their opposition to Johnson's plan. These are reported to be Thomas Massie (KY), Greg Norman (OK), and Chip Roy (TX). This means for the first time in the history of the Rules Committee, the Speaker will have to use votes from the opposition party to pass his legislative program.

The sticking point for the opponents of the proposed rule is that they believe the only way they will get a border security bill is if they attach it to the Ukraine military aid bill. Even though Johnson is offering a version of H.R. 2, the stillborn GOP border security bill, everyone knows that bill will barely pass the House and will never see the light of day in the Senate. As an aside, I think this argument is disingenuous to the point of dishonesty. The House hasn't attempted to tie border security to any other bill since the new Congress began in January. The same logic seems to apply to tying border security to Israel and Taiwan foreign aid as it does tying it to Ukraine. Running up the civilian body count in a foreign country to try to score domestic political points is not something I'd care to boast about.

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The second issue is changing the vote threshold for considering a "motion to vacate the chair." Kevin McCarthy made the worst sort of Faustian bargain when he agreed, as the price of keeping his job as Speaker, to a rule change that allowed any single member to call for a vote on replacing the Speaker. This decision came back to bite McCarthy when eight Republicans teamed up with the Democrat bloc to remove him.

To say that some members are going nuts is an understatement.

Just as in a marriage, you never want to say anything you can't take back; I think the Freedom Caucus has done just that. The social media commentary about Johnson from some prominent caucus members and their allies has probably burned any bridges between them and Johnson and the rest of the House GOP. This Freedom Caucus memo equates Johnson's methodology to Nancy Pelosi.

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Allegedly, Johnson was confronted in public by Wisconsin Republican Derrick Van Orden, who called Johnson "tubby."

(In fairness, Van Orden is now saying he called Matt Gaetz "tubby" after Gaetz called him a "squish." He also said that his comment about the motion to vacate was a challenge to Greene and others who threatened a vote. Either way, it's ugly, and the scars from this will remain.)

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To give a flavor for the rhetoric, Matt Gaetz appeared nearly Churchillian.

I think a significant Rubicon has been crossed today. Three members of the House Rules Committee are threatening the Speaker with a motion to vacate. That motion isn't going anywhere because, unlike with McCarthy, the Democrats will vote to support Johnson.

Still, this revolt by members admitted to the House's sanctum sanctorum will not be forgotten and probably will not be forgiven.

Johnson was the architect of the deal that gave the Freedom Caucus three seats on the Rules Committee. After this fiasco, there is a better-than-even chance that Johnson will return to tradition and replace them with loyalists.

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In the end, I fear that the Freedom Caucus may have made itself irrelevant to policy development and superfluous as a voting bloc as even its members are not united on the hardline stand taken today.

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