Opinion: House Speaker spats bad for Republicans, worse for America

Photo/Alex Brandon/The Associated Press / Votes are tallied during the 13th round of voting in the House chamber as the House meets for the fourth day to elect a speaker and convene the 118th Congress in Washington on Friday, Jan. 6, 2023.
Photo/Alex Brandon/The Associated Press / Votes are tallied during the 13th round of voting in the House chamber as the House meets for the fourth day to elect a speaker and convene the 118th Congress in Washington on Friday, Jan. 6, 2023.

It's hard to find a better microcosm for today's Republican Party than the self-inflicted debacle that America witnessed this week.

The GOP holds a narrow majority in the U.S. House of Representatives, and yet the party has botched in the worst way the selection of a House speaker. Instead of unifying behind California Rep. Kevin McCarthy, Republicans displayed on national television the toxic fractiousness that has become their party's most glaring -- and burdensome -- trait.

If nothing else, it amounted to entertaining, bizarre theater.

Usually a perfunctory legislative exercise, the selection of House speaker has endured for days.

Through it all, grandchildren of lawmakers expecting to be sworn in -- some of them babies and toddlers -- impatiently fidgeted as the nominal grown-ups tried in vain to make up their minds.

Regardless of when the selection is made, the damage to the GOP has been done. McCarthy has, in essence, been held hostage by scorched-earth ideologues who seem to want to air grudges against party leadership as much as they insist on making egregious demands that don't belong in any election of a speaker.

The failure to elect a speaker is the most glaring indicator yet of the chasm within the Republican Party between far-right extremists and more moderate, establishment members. That chasm cost Republicans the opportunity for a much more decisive victory in the midterms, when soaring inflation and President Joe Biden's dismal approval ratings made Democrats keenly vulnerable.

Instead, Democrats retained control of the U.S. Senate, a bevy of former President Donald Trump's election denier candidates lost, and Republicans could only muster a slim edge over Democrats in the House.

What's wrong with the Republican Party was on full display in the House chamber this week.

The nightmare for the GOP got so bad even Trump felt like he had to come to McCarthy's rescue Wednesday, posting on his Truth Social platform that Republicans should back McCarthy because he "will do a good job, and maybe even a GREAT JOB."

With friends like that ...

If GOP leaders think it can't get worse, they should think again. As long as they continue to spruce up a soapbox for the party's far-right conspiracy theorists and election deniers, they're going to endure more debasing episodes like the one that unfolded this week.

Republicans cast the mold for this fiasco in myriad ways, branding insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as simply exercising "legitimate political discourse," denouncing the Justice Department's lawful and necessary investigation into the presence of classified documents at Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence and allowing Trump's meddling in the midterms that led to disastrous results for the GOP, to name a few.

It's not just the Republican Party that's on the losing end of all this. Failure to elect a speaker has effectively paralyzed the House. Legislation has ground to a halt. The swearing-in of new members remains stalled. In short, dysfunction and petty politicking within the GOP is derailing the party's agenda, and keeping real, important work in Congress from getting done.

Republicans couldn't have imagined a worse start to the 118th Congress. Neither could hardworking Americans, many of whom voted for GOP candidates. Those loyal Republican voters deserve to see a party that can organize itself as a functioning entity. It is unconscionable the GOP would let them down in such short order.

Will the GOP finally realize what's at stake if they continue to wallow in such conspicuous disunity? The events of this week suggest they're light years from that realization. For the sake of this nation, we hope otherwise.

The Chicago Tribune

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