Apparently, Kevin McCarthy’s ouster is Putin’s fault
By: Rachel Marsden
The first-of-a-kind dethroning of a US House speaker shows that Americans don’t want to write blank checks for Ukraine
In a vote of 216-210, Republicans voted with 208 Democrats in the US House of
Representatives to regime-change one of their own — House Speaker Kevin McCarthy
(R-CA). McCarthy had tried appeasing the establishment over Ukraine funding
while also paying lip-service to the populists to whom he owed his job as House
speaker – and has just been rewarded with the honor of being the first dethroned
speaker in US history. It’s a victory for the average American — unless you’re
an establishment hack, in which case it’s all about Russia.
“The Chinese are happy, the Russians are happy, the Iranians are happy.
Americans should be mad as hell that these eight people did this to our
country,” said Rep. Dan Bacon (R-NE). How dare anyone derail the establishment
policies when they’ve made everything so great for the average American.
McCarthy’s supporters accuse opponents within his own party of fundraising off
his ouster. If Americans are willing to reward the ouster by donating to those
responsible, then it would seem that they aren’t actually “mad as hell” and it’s
establishment Republicans who are offside.
How fitting is it that the last straw in McCarthy’s case seems to be
allegations, evoked by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) that he had gone behind the GOP’s
back to the Biden administration to work something out on the continued stream
of aid to Ukraine, which had been shamelessly tacked on to the budget
legislation that would keep the federal government running for at least another
45 days. The Ukraine funding provision had been the sticking point that had been
preventing Republicans from approving the bill until McCarthy stripped it out.
But then Gaetz accused McCarthy of making a deal with Biden to revive a vote on
yet another round of aid for Ukraine in a separate House vote.
If Biden wanted to take the risk of tacking support for Ukraine on to the
bill that he figured that lawmakers would be forced to pass lest the alternative
be a shutdown of the whole government, then he should have had to assume the
full consequences of that gamble. Let the government shut down because the
American president figured that its funding is as important as Ukraine’s – and
that paying American bureaucrats would be directly tied to lawmakers’
willingness to keep paying Kiev’s. Then when those who feel that they best
represent the growing constituency of American voters who are increasingly
against more cash for Kiev as they feel the pinch of their own worsening
economic situation brought about by misguided establishment policies reject the
two-headed legislative abomination – then let them place the blame squarely in
Biden’s lap for even taking the risk of conjuring it up in the first place.
McCarthy has denied the backroom dealing, but if it walks like a duck and talks
like a duck… McCarthy arguably wouldn’t have even been in the job had it not
been for promising the populist faction of the GOP – the Freedom Caucus – that
he wouldn’t give Ukraine a “blank check.” But he seemed influenced by the
criticism of establishment GOP fixtures like Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY). “The idea
that the party is now no longer going to support the Ukrainian people. For
somebody who has the picture of Ronald Reagan on his wall in his office in the
Capitol, the notion that now Kevin McCarthy is going to make himself the leader
of the pro-Putin wing of my party is just a stunning thing,” Cheney said in an
interview last year. Suddenly, McCarthy was running around comparing Putin and
Ukraine to Adolf Hitler and World War II in the same way that a teenager boy
who’s told he’s effeminate overcompensates by weightlifting and aggressively
hitting on girls. It’s like McCarthy had something to prove. And as everyone
knows, that usually means that under the surface there’s something else going on
– an identity crisis or at the very least a lack of confidence in oneself or
one’s positions.
Cheney, meanwhile, lost her primary last year to a pro-Trump challenger, which
is just more evidence of the growing disconnect between voters and those sent to
Washington to represent their interests. In even trying to appease the likes of
Cheney and triangulate or accommodate their establishment narratives and
positions, McCarthy has only shown that he can’t read the room when it comes to
voters.
Clearly the Freedom Caucus giveth, but also taketh away. And the
establishment GOP is now acting like it’s being victimized by a small group of
their own party’s lawmakers who dare to stand in the way of the usual cronies
ramming through whatever they want, regardless of how out of step it is with the
party’s growing populist base. The same base whose ideas have become so
mainstream that they lifted Trump to the presidency in 2016 and have him running
far ahead even now among GOP voters for 2024 despite his multiple legal woes.
The fact that Democrats’ partisanship was successfully used against McCarthy by
the Freedom Caucus to oust him just proves that the difference between the two
main American parties matters much less these days when actors in both parties
are constantly agreeing to ram through elements of an agenda that seems to
mostly benefit the interests of Western establishment elites. So if they can
unite in a bipartisan manner on that, then there shouldn’t be any problem making
common cause with those across the aisle who oppose it. Arguably, that’s even
the model for the defeat of the establishment agenda — for the right/left
paradigm to take a backseat.
But if you ask McCarthy’s backers, it’s Putin who’s thrilled – not average
Americans who have just been spared, at least temporarily, seeing more of their
tax cash tucked into Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky’s cargo pants or
laundered into those of military industrial complex cronies “for Ukraine.”
Apparently Putin-shaming one’s opponents is losing its luster as a rhetorical
weapon designed to dampen patriots’ enthusiasm for taking out the trash.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN