Double Post just because.
Holy ****.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/26/u...-congress.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=0
So - the new Speaker will be?????
Kevin McCarthy is the current Majority Leader and seems to be the CW favorite.
Eric Cantor must be so p-ssed.![]()
And his tenure will be a short one. Replace one Establishment stiff with another one? Great, but I'm not sure I see the point unless the only goal is to have someone who's not weeping 24/7.
Personally, I want to see a lunatic in charge! Only way for them to learn that governing isn't the same thing as doing the right wing talk show circuit.
Prediction for new House leadership - the living will envy the dead.
Developing: House Republicans create job.
We could see some interesting electioneering, but I doubt it. It's in both the establishment and the insurgency's interests to pass it to an establishment figure. That lets things get done so the government doesn't collapse, and it also lets the crazies gnash their teeth about the establishment when they go tub-thumping next summer. The smart ones among the wackadoodles also know that it's possible that a wave election could flip the House, and if that happens they don't want the blame. Finally, they know even if they hold the House the Senate is likely going to flip, in which case a radical House speaker wouldn't be able to get anything done anyway, so why waste the benefits of incumbency in that slot on a guy who is most likely powerless.
Now, if the GOP pulls off a hat trick in 2016 it's going to be Night of the Long Knives inside the GOP caucus when they vote in the new Congress' officers, because the stakes will be insanely high.
The problem is the wackadoodles don't care about the long term health of the party. I understand that's not logical, but that's the way they act. Its like how people expect Ted Cruz to not cause a govt shutdown, because it'll hurt his party.He doesn't give a rat's arse. Furthermore if an Establishment type gets the GOP nomination, is it in Cruz', etc interests to see them win (and thus be out of the nomination picture for 8 years or longer since sitting VP's tend to be next in line), or lose? Likewise if an Establishment dude gets the Speaker chair (which they could since nobody really wants the job) is it in Goehmert, etc interest to support them, or rail against them?
Put a nutter in charge and at least you end the palace intrigue that's been going on since 2010. Put a Boner clone in there and nothing changes.
Just like Labour did in Great Britain.
Sorta. I think Labour has the problem of part of their coalition walked off the reservation (Scotland, now controlled by the Scottish Independence Party). It would be almost like if the dwindling remaining moderates decided to form their own party, leaving a hard right GOP contingent totally made up of TP'ers.
Taxed Enough Already is not the problem. The idiots who *** with the idea of limited federal government are the problem.
Two legitimately funny tweets in response:
Frankly, I'm kind of worried by who's going to replace Boehner. He may come off as pretty far right, but I have a gut feeling that he actually held some of the derp in check behind the scenes.
Gee, he was such a "Jobs, jobs, jobs" Speaker. All those job bills he passed.
Frankly, I'm kind of worried by who's going to replace Boehner. He may come off as pretty far right, but I have a gut feeling that he actually held some of the derp in check behind the scenes.
Oh I'm sure he did. I don't know who's leading the TP caucus with Bachmann gone, but imagine if that person had the role of Speaker.
Huelskamp appears in a controversial documentary, comparing gay rights to communism and saying gay marriage will bring the second coming of Jesus Christ.
Next Monday afternoon, the Senate will vote on a "clean" stop-gap funding bill to keep government operating after October 1, a funding bill that includes Planned Parenthood money. Provided Mitch McConnell can keep presidential candidates Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio and Rand Paul bottled up, that bill should pass the Senate.
Then House Speaker John Boehner has to get to work on it, which is now complicated by his impending resignation. Thursday night, prior to his shocking announcement Friday morning, leadership cobbled together a plan—promising that they'll get a Planned Parenthood defunding bill on President Obama's desk to veto by using reconciliation, the budget tool that only requires 51 Senate votes. Now he just has to sell it, a matter that will be confused by his departure.