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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Showing posts with label McCarthy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McCarthy. Show all posts

Monday, October 16, 2023

The House Speaker Conflict Has an Upside

Sometimes it's worth the fight.

The prevailing narrative regarding Republican infighting over choosing a new House Speaker is that the GOP is a holy mess. Once Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) was given the boot, there was a lot of backroom brawling to elect a new leader for the lower chamber with all due haste. It appeared and was announced that the party would be willing to coalesce around Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA). However, the hue and cry got louder when that went down in flames: “Why can’t the GOP get its act together and be like those in the Democratic Party?” Republicans did eventually pick another speaker candidate, Ohio’s Jim Jordan, but they’re far from unified behind him.

Here are a few reasons and a bit of analysis as to why the seeming chaos may serve a good purpose. As everyone’s mother used to say, “Comparisons are odious.” This is undoubtedly true when assessing the two major US political parties. They believe and espouse different things and are dissimilar at their core. Painting with a broad brush, one could say the Democrats more often elevate the collective while Republicans place more emphasis on the individual. This is not absolute, but the argument can be made that those who put an R after their name think, act, and respond to situations in a distinctive way.

It’s easy to criticize one side when a food fight is underway, but it’s crucial to remember why the battle was joined in the first place. Many have speculated it was a personal vendetta between Florida’s Matt Gaetz and McCarthy. We cannot know if that is true, but we can look at what Gaetz said regarding why he wanted the California Republican out.

The Florida Republican said he was sick and tired of “continuing resolutions” and felt strongly that the House should be forced to do its job and put together a comprehensive budget as they are obliged to do by law. Speaking on the House floor, Gaetz said:

“A vote for a continuing resolution is a vote to continue the Green New Deal, a vote to continue inflationary spending, and the most troubling of fashions, a vote for a continuing resolution is a vote to continue the election interference of Jack Smith.”

Gaetz and his compatriots sought single-subject spending bills instead of bloated omnibus packages. As Liberty Nation’s Jim Fite clarified, “To them, the way to force both sides of the fiscal and political fence to balance the budget is to only vote for single-subject bills and simply refuse to support anything else, no matter the cost.” Since the US is currently 33 trillion (and counting) in debt, this does seem to be a noble cause.

House Speaker: The Pitfalls of Unity

The national media has primarily aimed its guns at the fight and avoided the reason for it. This type of superficial coverage is their stock and trade. They maintain the Democrats are organized and unified. Well, that can be said of all dictatorships, can’t it? Unity doesn’t necessarily make for good policy; it just means that everyone is willing to go along with others in their group. Viewed another way, this kind of Stepford Wives behavior is unsettling. Why think for yourself when all you need is to do what you are told?

There is a point to be made in favor of holding to one’s principles, even if it means a battle must be joined. Yes, conflict can be chaotic and ugly. The easy thing to do is focus on the battle rather than the reason for the war.

The founders of this American experiment purposely set up a system that is often slow and messy. They constructed several branches of the governance tree for good reason.  Efficiency and group think are often enemies of reason and logic. Yes, a republic can be plodding and unweildy – but perhaps that’s as it should be.

Read More From Leesa K. Donner

Saturday, October 14, 2023

McCarthy is Done and Now, the Real Story Begins, Part VI

By Rich Kozlovich

Well, here we are, Part VI, and I thought this was all done by Part IV.  At this point Steve Scalise has dropped out entirely and Jim Jordan has been chosen as the Republican nominee.  There were news reports there was a big blow up between Scalise and Jordan, which appears to have been false, and my guess that was an effort to smear Jordan.  

Now Jordan has to consolidate his nomination with 217 votes.   House Majority Whip Tom Emmer wants to consolidate support for Jordan, but would consider running only if Jordan can't get the necessary votes, and and it's looking like another battle. 

There are interesting side bars playing out here.   

McCarthy is now working to "clear the way for Jordan since he won the nomination on Friday, too, formally endorsing him and making calls on his behalf for the Judiciary Committee chairman to take his old gig."   McCarthy has predicted confidently that Jordan will be able to consolidate the requisite 217 votes after members cool down over the weekend and spend time with their constituents and family members."

On the other hand,  according to J.D Rucker, "RINOs Like John Rutherford Will Go Against Trump and the American People to Spite Matt Gaetz" quoting Rutherford aying:

"I'm a no on allowing Matt Gaetz and the other seven to win by putting their individual in as speaker."

His ilk all hate Gaetz and are still wanting McCarthy to be returned to the Speaker's chair.  So, since they're a minority in the party, are they now rebels who need to be kicked out of the caucus and primaried?  That's what was said about the Heroic Eight who voted against McCarthy.  Well, Rucker surely thinks so saying:

Any GOP member of Congress who is against Jim Jordan, Donald Trump, and the American people must be censured by their district’s party and primaried next year. Their allegiance is to McCarthy and the Swamp, not America.

The emerging speculations over all this are amazing.  What if the Republican can't get together?  Is it possible the McCarthy wing can rig a deal with the Democrats and get him re-elected as Speaker.  I don't think so because that would make the Democrats look like fools, after all, they initially, via Nancy Pelosi, swore they'd support him, and then stabbed him in the back. And McCarthy was shocked, shocked I tell you.  Imagine that.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries offered " to enter into a bipartisan coalition to run the House of Representatives", which I thought was hilarious yesterday.  I'm not so sure it's all that funny today.

The fact is, they want one of their own as Speaker,  and if Republicans can't get their act together,  America may get a Democrat Speaker, with a Republican House majority. If that happened, all Chairmen of all the House Committees would be taken over by Democrats, and all those investigations would disappear like the morning fog in sunlight.  If you doubt that could happen, take this issue in the Texas legislature as an example of what happens where the Speaker works against the majority. 

Real conservatives despise Democrat rule, but one thing everyone has to acknowledge, they know how to rule, and they rule with an iron fist allowing no dissension in the ranks.  For Democrats, that's not hard because they're all leftist lunatics who all have the same totalitarian vision of high taxes, big spending, big government and massive and intrusive regulations allowing them to control every aspect of our lives.

The Republican party has no shared vision.  While legitimate conservatives have a shared vision, the so-called moderates by their fence sitting nature can't define a vision, and the leftist might as well be Democrats for their vision of high taxes, big spending and big government.  The party is incapable of property defining what it stands for.  As a result they lack clarity, and without clarity they are incapable of a uniform vision in any form.

Again, there's reason Republicans are called the "stupid party" and the "useless party".  They earned it. 


Monday, January 23, 2023

For Biden and Democrats, Payback Is the Pits

How far will Kevin McCarthy and Republicans go to even the score?

For lo these many years, Democrats acted as if their reign of terror against the ever-dangerous Donald Trump and the rising MAGA movement would be free of consequence. They believed that the impunity and relentlessness with which they waged war against Trump from the moment he was elected president would exact no price. Joe Biden and company carried on as if their salad days of MAGA-bashing, reaching a pinnacle with the 2020 election, would know no end, and that they would never ultimately be held to account for their behavior. After all, Trump is just so easy to scandalize, and the Democrats all but control the media messaging that matters most. They still think they’re sitting pretty.

  Boy, are they in for a rude awakening. They will soon learn the same lesson most of us do at one time or another in life: Payback is the pits.

After controlling the narrative ever since the onset of the pandemic almost three years ago, allowing them to power-drive the final nail into Trump’s coffin, Democrats have now been stripped of their ability to sweep their actions under the rug. Sure, big media will do their best to shield this president from the political consequences of his metastasizing classified-documents scandal and the investigation cyclone Speaker Kevin McCarthy (D-CA) and House Republicans are unleashing as we speak. But even The New York Times will be forced to report in some way on probes into everything from Hunter Biden’s laptop to the scandalous collapse of the US southern border to left-wing censorship and the long-suspected but now-proven government collusion with social media.

Will Democrats Pay for Their Scorched-Earth Behavior?

Just days into his speakership, McCarthy has already established the new Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government to look deeply into federal agencies — from the FBI to the military —  engaging in prohibited political activity. He has seen articles of impeachment filed against DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and announced that the notorious trio of Trump-deranged Democrats – Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Eric Swalwell (D-CA), and Ilhan Omar (D-MN) — will be removed from plum committee assignments.  And fittingly in these days of bitter partisan politics gone wild, there are even plans to form a committee to investigate a former committee — the Jan. 6 panel.

If McCarthy and his House caucus are looking to exact an eye for an eye and even the score for the Democrats’ full-strength, unending exploitation of their majority status, then they would answer yes to a number of questions: Would they impeach Biden over a phone call to a foreign leader they find unacceptable? Would they impeach him after he leaves office? Would they conspire with Elon Musk to censor left-wing content on Twitter? Would they assemble a one-sided Hollywood production to magnify the sins of Biden, as Democrats did to Trump with their Soviet-style J6 Committee? Would they support draining the Strategic Petroleum Reserve for naked political advantage in the run-up to an election?

The overarching question is whether Republicans will criminalize political differences as leftists have done to a fault. Will McCarthy and Republicans act like Nancy Pelosi and Biden and declare left-wing Democrats a threat to democracy? Will they classify tens of millions of voters who pulled the lever for their opponents as extremists? Will they call for an FBI raid on Biden’s home to recover the classified documents we now know are stored there, as they were at Mar-a-Lago? Will they demand the release of Biden’s tax returns, after Pelosi broke with long-standing policy and did the dirty deed to Trump on her way out of the Speaker’s office? Will they raise the specter of applying the 25th Amendment to remove the cognitively challenged Biden from the presidency as the Dems did with Trump?

Of course, the answer to these questions is no. But the fact that the Democrats’ answer was yes when they controlled the entirety of the federal government is all you need to know about the lengths they were willing to go to kneecap Trump and his movement — and the overwhelming temptation for House Republicans to now respond in kind.

Monday, January 9, 2023

The World as I See It: The McCarthy Saga

By Rich Kozlovich 

Over the years I've published articles entitled:  The World as I See It:....followed by the subject matter, and in this piece about McCarthy's mission to become Speaker of the House, I will start with these two quotes, which I will come back to.

“Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” — Seneca, the Elder

“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard.— H.L.Mencken

First, we need to answer three questions.  

  • Should McCarthy have been challenged? Yes!
  • Should he have been challenged  as hard as he was? Yes!
  • Was it done properly? No! 

First, the Republicans in the Congress are made up of three factions.  The swamp dwelling RINO's, the conservative Constitutionalists, and the average go along to get along crowd, who aren't nearly as well informed or as bright as we, or they, think they are, nor as well informed or as bright as they should be, and they all have a problem with thinking they're special.  They're not.

McCarthy and the RINO swamp dwellers were arrogant and dismissive of the conservatives in the Congress, and the nation, right from the very beginning, and McCarthy moving into the Speaker's office without being chosen as Speaker is in my view an example of that arrogant and dismissive attitude.

Which brings me to the negotiations by both.  

McCarthy didn't negotiate in good faith because he and his supporters didn't think he had to negotiate at all, and didn't want to negotiate, in the first place.  Negotiating at the 11th hour wasn't negotiation, it was desperation, and finally capitulation.

The Conservatives didn't negotiate in good faith because they really didn't want McCarthy as Speaker no matter what was negotiated, although, if he'd agreed to half of what he's now agreed to, I believe all this might not have occurred.  His arrogance cost him, because it welded the "anyone but McCarthy" mentality firmly in that groups mind, and emotions, yet they continued to negotiate as if they would vote for him if he capitulated on some important issues.  And while they eventually had to vote him in, their actions demonstrated they weren't  acting in good faith, but were now trapped by their folly, and since that became clear, at least to me, it diminished them.

While he ultimately did get chosen, and it appears a call from Trump to Gaetz was what it took to push Gaetz and the remaining holdouts over the line.  Now, we need to ask:  What really occurred in the end, and what will be the long term results?  First, now everyone knows Trump is the leader of the party, not Mitch McConnell.  Outside of the gutless Republicans and RINO's in the Senate, no one cares one whit for what McConnell thinks.  The conservatives are willing to bend for Trump, and McCarthy is now totally indebted to  him.  Will that make him a better Speaker?  As an example, "will he commit to not raising the debt ceiling without a concrete plan to cap spending and operate under a budget that balances in 10 years....to force deep cuts in the federal budget.....?" We'll see! 

McCarthy has been publicly humiliated beyond anything I've seen.  He's never going to forget or forgive this humiliation, and that's understandable, and that shouldn't have been done.  He's been so weakened he'll be walking on a frozen pond with thin ice from now on.  I almost feel sorry for him, and whether he deserved it or not, that was bad politics, bad strategy, and bad manners that will haunt the conservatives in the future, and one has to wonder if that it will come back to haunt Gaetz, except, there's a caveat to that.

While I think the conservative caucus gave up the high ground on integrity during all this, and I think in the short run it will impact their ability to get things done, in the long haul it's not going to matter.  In point of fact, their actions may be a major factor in getting things done.  The swamp, on both sides of the aisle, is now scared. 

McCarthy's supporters in the House, and the RINO's in the Senate, along with Republican state leaders have been given an unpleasant wake up call.  They're in for a fight, as these "rebels" are activists and activists with a cause don't care what anyone thinks, or says, including the media.  They're not going to be intimidated and they're not going to be suppressed or impressed by the "leaderships" threats or pronouncements, and their base, which is turning activist, is supportive of these "rebels", and that base is getting larger by the day, and they're going to push their positions as far as they can as hard as they can.

So, that leaves us with what?  

The House cannot pass legislation without agreement from the Senate and the President.  No bill revoking all this spending insanity or impeachment actions will ever be brought up in the Senate while Schumer has the majority, making legislation or impeachments passed by the House toothless.....sort of......because that doesn't mean they're helpless.  There are a number of things the House can do no matter what the Senate or the President does or doesn't do.

  • First, the House controls the purse strings.  They can shut down the government over spending, and if the nation is caught between government shut downs and gridlock versus passage of all these insane initiatives by Biden and the Democrats, the nation will be far better off with gridlock and shutdown. They just have to possess the backbone to defend that position.
  • Second, no legislation passed by the Senate can become law without consent of the House, so they can stop any insane laws being pushed by treasonous leftists controlling the Senate and the administration.  
These first two initiatives, along with passing legislation they know won't be taken up by the Senate, can be used as an impetus for a RINO hunt in the Republican party.
  • Third, they can honestly investigate all the criminal activity by the agencies and departments of the federal government, along with the Democrats controlling them over the last 16 years and demand prosecution.
The Congress really doesn't have the Constitutional authority to do that. Except the Democrats have done it already with Trump, and now in order to fight such an action they'll have to publicly state they've been corrupt.  Even though they can't make the administration take up prosecution on criminal activity there's value to these actions. 

By impeaching those who have failed to live up to their oaths of office, whether the Senate takes up those impeachments or not, and investigating the criminal activity of elected and appointed officials along with their bureaucratic myrmidons, they will establish the facts regarding their failure to perform sworn duties, and their clearly criminal activity for future use and historical posterity.
  • Fourth, they can, and should, publicize their findings constantly, and attack the media for their collusion and corruption with the Democrat party, and even personally attack the integrity of media personalities when they lie, distort, or misrepresent the facts, and that includes these nitwit celebrities.  
  • Fifth, they need to create a coalition to start a massive grass roots effort to overturn the Republican leadership in each and every state, and that should start with the parents who've been fighting the arrogance and tyranny of school boards across the nation that are condemning America's children to leftist insanity. 
These parents are now motivated, and that motivation needs to be fanned into flames of conservative passion, and do that by creating and funding a national organization under the name:  Fixing Education in America is Job One.
  • Sixth, they need to have the guts to do all that, because to take that stand means embracing conservative values and principles and having the courage to demand the nation re-implement and reaffirm those foundational Judaic/Christian values on which America was founded and flourished.
Which bring me back to the two quotes at the beginning of this piece.  I think this beginning is the end to the absolute control of the Republican party by the RINO's, and Americans asked for all this and has been  getting it good and hard, and at some point they're going to do something about it.

One of my heroes in business was Chuck Steinmetz.  I was so impressed with him thirty years ago, after I started my own pest control company, I went to hear him speak at the University of Kentucky Pest Control Short course.  After he spoke I went up to him and introduced myself telling him I'd come to the Short Course because after ten years in the industry I just started my own business and wanted to hear what he had to say.   I find what he said to me over thirty years ago is timeless, and is applicable to a great many things, including good government.  

He said there were only two things needed to be successful in business, brains and guts, and you can hire brains.  That applies to getting good government also.

 

Friday, January 6, 2023

McCarthy's Freaky Friday

By Rich Kozlovich

Okay, here we go, and I'm going to run this post as a time sequenced journal because I think it will all be over today......Maybe!

1:13 PM: 

We now know McCarthy lost the eleventh vote but picked up eight votes from the conservative caucus in the 12th vote, Clyde, Bishop, Donalds, Cloud Luna, Miller, Norman, Perry, and I think this is the end....finally.  If I'm calculating this correctly, based on the last count, that gives him 209 votes, he needs nine more and the remaining holdouts are going to find it hard to keep pushing against him, and Jim Jordan does not want to be Speaker, and the nation shouldn't want him to be Speaker.  

The nation needs him to attack the Biden administration as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee.  He's the ultimate attack dog, unrelenting, courteous, stunningly logical, intelligent and above all, factual to a fault.  At some point all this vile rhetoric has to stop, especially by the media, but make no mistake, this will haunt them for years to come.  Some things just can't be taken back.  It's like driving a nail into a fine piece of furniture. No matter how well it's repaired, the scar remains forever. 

3:30 PM:

There has now been 13 votes and 15 of the Republican holdouts, have voted for McCarthy and the reason why is there has been an agreement and it's clear McCarthy has given them just about everything they've wanted, and based on the fact his maximum support reached 201 votes, I'm going to conclude that gives him 216, leaving six holdouts, and I can't see that lasting much longer.  At some point their colleagues will turn on them asking what I've been asking:  Is it about the mission, or is it about you? 

But, as the article points out, there are still problems with that agreement even if they vote him in as Speaker.  There are those who are proclaiming since there has been zero wins and 13 losses — it’s time to replace DC swamp rat Kevin McCarthy, claiming:

I can guarantee you that somebody in the House of Representatives could get to 218 votes. It’s time to find that person.

Really?  Impressive rhetoric, but does anyone really want the job now? And if McCarthy withdraws does anyone think his supporters, which is a large majority, won't do what the conservative caucus is doing now?

It's really turning ugly, and truthfully, I have no idea why McCarthy wants the job now, and one Republican has threatened to support the Democrats if this continues, and he may not be alone.   

The holdouts negotiated fraudulently.  It's now clear they never intended to vote for McCarthy no matter what he agreed to, and they should have fearlessly, openly and honestly said so.  They didn't, and now it's time to pay the piper.  No matter what happens, they've lost credibility for their lack of integrity, and and normally integrity thrown away is integrity lost forever.  Except for one thing.  They are a representation of the base of the Republican party now, and that base is getting huge, the elite despise them and they despise the elite.....passionately.  

Their number is going to grow, and they're going to organize at the grass roots in order to fix the problems with education by eliminating tyrannical arrogant school board members with conservatives.   That will become the foundation for an activist movement adhering to the Constitution and conservative principles and values dedicated to the preservation of America's freedoms.  

4:33 PM:

I've waited to publish P&D Today in order to finalize this story.  Apparently it may even have to wait for a Sad Saturday rendition, and I'm publishing this piece now, and P&D Today and sending it out.

Best wishes to us all! 

Rich 

Thursday, January 5, 2023

McCarthy's Turbulent Thursday (Update II)

  By Rich Kozlovich

Now, I'm a firm believer heterodoxy, I practiced it for most of my life whenever I was in a leadership position, with the phrase, "You're all wrong and I'm gonna tell ya why!" And I said it because I believed it. But I also was willing to acknowledge the good things done by adversaries because it was never about me.  It was always about the mission.  

I hated the military, and I despised the officers, and I still do, but my years in the military molded me in ways I never realized at the time.  I've often said this, and I think only those who served can understand this fully, "You couldn't pay me a million dollars to repeat those years, but you couldn't pay me a million to have missed them."   And one of the things I unconsciously embraced from my military years, without even realizing it, was mission orientation.  

We now have had ten votes and an eleventh nomination for Speaker of the House, and McCarthy has given in on just about everything they've demanded, including giving one member instead of five the power to make a motion to vacate the chair and remove the Speaker.  That was, in my opinion, the big one, and he's accepted that. It's time to move on.  Even those who applauded their stand must be asking:  What do they want? Is this about the mission, or is it about them?  Nothing is ever as it seems....ever!

Let's review.  

Here's take on Kevin McCarthy.

Kevin McCarthy is arguably the most compromised man in Congress, having spent the last 16 years selling himself, his voting authority, and his leadership position in the House, in exchange for the accumulation of raw power. From the moment he finished college, McCarthy, the two-time Davos attendee, who has never held a real job, has committed himself to the Uniparty machine in Washington.

McCarthy is entirely compromised by both foreign actors and domestic lobbyists. He is a tool for the establishment, an instrument of the elites. A McCarthy-led House GOP will not conduct serious investigations of wrongdoing. It will not roll back the efforts of the Biden Administration and the unaccountable administrative state. It will not restore fiscal sanity. It will not oppose the slava slush fund to Ukraine. Kevin McCarthy has a long track record in Congress, and his track record is certified trash.

Also, we've seen vicious personal attacks against the "freedom fighters" in Congress and I think these vicious personal attacks by McCarthy supporters against the "freedom fighters", or as the McCarthyites call them, "rebels" plays into all this.  They're really angry and resentful.  

It was claimed they had psychological problems, they were stupid, they were traitors, they were terrorists, and worse.  That's not a good strategic plan for those you wish to negotiate with.  But it's clear, the McCarthyites never intended to negotiate or would have done so weeks ago, instead of this 11th hour capitulation.  I think it's clear they never believed anyone could stand against them this long and take as much heat as they've done.  It seems to me these people never understood, or cared, once you have publicly humiliated someone, they will never forgive you.  

Is that a reason for they're continuing to hold out?  I think it's part of it, but I also believe they've been negotiating in bad faith.  What they really want is just about anyone except McCarthy as Speaker of the House, if that's true, and I think it is, they should have stated that openly and defiantly from the very beginning.  They didn't. 

There now seems to be only two options left, McCarthy must give up in his quest to be Speaker, and if that happens we go through all this again, because I think the McCarthyites, who are a large majority, are so outraged they will become the resistance to anyone the conservative resistance offers.  At this point I think the only effective answer is the conservative resistance must now act in good faith based on their publicly stated positions, demands and negotiations and give him the Chair.  

Character and integrity counts.  Both of which have history that will never be forgotten.  The conservative caucus had the high ground and threw it away.  That seeming lack of integrity will undermine everything they do or push from now on.   Now, no matter how this turns out, he's toast, the freedom caucus' values are in question diminishing them, the entire Republican House is seriously weakened and there is no agreed upon mission orientation. 

What could possibly go wrong?   


McCarthy's Turbulent Thursday

  By Rich Kozlovich

I could go on blathering about the details on how McCarthy has now gone on for six votes and lost all of them, and how Trump still supports him, and how he's agreed to concessions, none of which are the big ones they really want regarding spending and the ability to dump his as Speaker when he reneges on his concessions.  I've dubbed him with a new royal title.  Count Caveat, since every deal he agrees to is ambiguous and filled with caveats that make it possible to renege on agreements.  

I've pointed out the only way he can win is if he stabs the entire Republican party in the back and cuts a deal with the Democrats, and there's apparently been rumors that's what he's doing, and Democrats like Ocasio-Cortez, Marcy Kaptur and others are touting such a deal.  A deal with big concessions about creating a "unity" government, that would give them control of the House and McCarthy as their puppet. 

All the while showing just how little class these juvenile Democrats have by breaking out popcorn as the speaker battle unfolds.  Karl Rove, who just about has a monopoly on being wrong, claims this is an 'unmitigated disaster' for Republicans, which of course means his brand of Republican, and none of them are conservatives.   

McCarthy Wins More Time With House Adjournment:

Chamber will reconvene at noon Thursday, allowing speaker candidates to cut deals On a two-vote margin, the House decided Wednesday night to adjourn until noon Thursday after six votes so far this week have failed to choose the next speaker. This already is the most protracted election for speaker the House has seen in a century—and it's far from clear that another night of negotiations among Republicans will be able to resolve their differences. Rep. Kevin McCarthy, who has fallen short in every vote, sought the adjournment to give him more time to lobby for support among GOP members opposed to his candidacy. "I don't think a vote tonight will make a difference," McCarthy said, per the Washington Post, "but a vote in the future will.

"I don't think a vote tonight will make a difference, but a vote in the future will?"  Really?  Interesting statement. What's he know no one else knows?  Then there are these pieces worth viewing: 

And then there's this post:

However, there are two things that are under discussed.  First, Jim Jordan should not be chosen as Speaker, he doesn't want it and the nation needs him to be the Chairman of the Judiciary committee in order to go after the Democrats and the Deep State corruption and crime that's being swept under the rug.  That's his strength and his desire. Even with the restrictions place on him by the Democrats, he humiliated and exposed those he questioned.  What will happen when he's Chairman?

Secondly, demanding the Speaker push certain legislation is a red herring, since no conservative legislation passed by the house will be accepted by Schumer in the Senate, the best the House can do is block spending, even if it means shutting down the government, and as for Biden's claim, "For the first time in 100 years, we can't move", I think we need to ask:  That's a bad thing why? 

Given the current "movement" of the Biden Administration, being caught between gridlock and passing legislation Biden approves of,  gridlock is a good thing. And for the argument this embarrasses the nation:  How can this possibly be more embarrassing to America than watching a drooling moron and a laughing nitwit babble on and becoming the laughing stock on the national and international world stage?  

So, I'm thinking, maybe it doesn't matter if McCarthy becomes speaker.  Since the new Republican Speaker will be toothless anyway.  If they can get him to agree to a "firm" unbending position on no more spending, and appointing committee chairmen who will go after Biden and his corrupt and incompetent myrmidons, that might be the best the nation can hope for, at least from Congress.    The real solution lies in local initiatives, starting with fixing education, ending voter fraud, and that starts with choosing new leadership in each state, and throwing out all the go along to get along crowd. 

Everything is the basics!