GOP struggle widens as Boehner rebukes hard right
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Republican establishment's much-anticipated pushback against the tea
party wing is underway. House Speaker John Boehner made that clear
Thursday, when he renewed his denunciation of groups that try to defeat
GOP incumbents they consider too willing to compromise with Democrats.
Some Republican
loyalists wonder what took so long. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
recently took steps to help mainstream Republicans in party primaries,
but Boehner's high-profile outburst will move the effort to the GOP's
front burners.
Cheering him on are mainstream Republicans who
angrily watched for three years as hard-right groups exercised
remarkable clout in the party, the Congress and elections. Tea
party-backed nominees helped the GOP win control of the House in 2010,
but they also lost several Senate races seen as winnable, keeping the
Senate in Democratic hands.This past summer, uncompromising House Republicans forced a partial government shutdown that damaged the party's image, just as Boehner warned it would.
Many
Republicans also feel conservative activists pushed presidential
nominee Mitt Romney so far to the right on immigration and other issues
that it eased President Barack Obama's path to re-election last year.
"The
establishment has no choice at this point," said former Rep. Tom Davis,
a Virginia Republican who has criticized the tea party's growing
influence. "So they're taking them on.""To follow these groups is a downward spiral," Davis said.
Those groups will fight back hard, Davis warned, and it's not clear which faction will prevail in next year's midterm elections and beyond. "They're dug in pretty hard," he said.
For a second straight day, Boehner criticized groups such as Heritage Action, the Club for Growth and Americans for Prosperity. These Washington-based organizations vary on priorities and tactics. But all have sharply rebuked Republican leaders on key issues. And they have aided insurgent Republican challengers who vow never to compromise with Democrats, even if it means shutting down the government or defaulting on the federal debt.
Critics say the groups chiefly want to raise money by constantly inflaming political activists.
"They're misleading their followers," Boehner, R-Ohio, told reporters at the Capitol. "I just think that they've lost all credibility."
The issue at hand was a bipartisan budget plan that makes modest changes in spending levels. It is meant to avert another government shutdown and budget crisis in the near future.
But Boehner's remarks appeared aimed more broadly at tea partyers who say true conservatives never compromise, and at groups that try to oust established Republicans seeking re-election.
House actions under his speakership, Boehner said, "have not violated any conservative principle, not once." He then dismissed the activist groups, saying, "I don't care what they do."
Some Republicans fear an all-out struggle between the establishment and the tea party wings, saying both factions' money and energy are crucial to winning elections. But others say tea party excesses leave little choice.
Even after tea
party-backed nominees fumbled away likely GOP Senate victories in
Delaware, Indiana and elsewhere, the groups continue to target prominent
Republican veterans. They include Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky, who is seeking a sixth six-year term.
"We
can only take so much from these guys that are out there on the ledge,"
Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, said. He faces a tea party-backed
challenger in his bid for a ninth House term. The Chamber of Commerce,
which traditionally has done little in Republican primaries, is airing
ads for Simpson.
The chamber also helped defeat a tea party-backed candidate in a special House primary in Alabama last month.
Conservative
activists say Boehner and others will regret their moves. Groups like
Heritage Action and the Club for Growth have tens of thousands of
followers, said Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., who has often feuded with
Boehner.
"For any Republican
to ignore them is dangerous to them electorally," Huelskamp told
reporters. Tea party activists were crucial to the Republicans'
breakthrough victories in 2010, he said. If party elders say, "We don't
need you anymore," he said, millions of conservatives may sit out future
elections.
Heritage Action
spokesman Dan Holler said his group won't back down. When Boehner writes
off the dozens of House members who won't compromise on tax and
spending issues, it means "he's going to rely heavily on Democrats" to
pass legislation, Holler said. That's bad for conservative principles,
he said, and bad for GOP cohesion in elections.
Boehner's
allies say the alternative is worse. When Boehner tries to placate the
staunchest conservatives in his caucus, they say, the results are a
government shutdown, a major loss on the "fiscal cliff" deal a year ago
and other Republican embarrassments.
Sixty-two
House Republicans voted against the Boehner-backed budget deal
Thursday, requiring dozens of Democratic votes to pass it.
Steve
LaTourette, a Boehner friend and former GOP House member from Ohio,
said he is heartened by the stepped-up actions by Boehner, the Chamber
and others frustrated by tea party tactics. He warned, however, that
mainstream Republicans won't tame the tea party faction without huge
amounts of effort and money.
The intraparty struggle, LaTourette said, "is a script that's yet to be written."
Rep.
Kenny Marchant, a Texas Republican who embraces the tea party label,
notes that American voters will have a big say in the outcome. He gets
along fine with Boehner, Marchant said, but he opposed the
leadership-backed budget deal.
"I'm just getting no input from back home that they have any interest in doing this," Marchant said.
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