Tribalism Threatens GOP Senate Chances in 2014
Boehner has lashed out at highly
influential outside conservative groups including Club for Growth and
Heritage Action for opposing the deal, saying on Thursday that they had
crossed a line and lost their credibility by declaring their opposition
even before reading the compromise. Heritage Action announced that it
would include the budget vote in its annual legislative scorecard.
“This budget agreement takes
giant steps in the right direction,” Boehner told reporters. “But when
groups come out and criticize something they’ve never seen, you begin to
wonder just how credible those actions are.”
More than 50 high-profile
conservative activists signed onto a statement Wednesday responding to
both House Speaker John Boehner’s harsh words for conservative groups
earlier in the day and the firing of the Republican Study Committee’s
longtime executive director, Paul Teller, who became too closely allied
with the outside groups. “It is clear that the conservative movement has
come under attack on Capitol Hill today,” the statement reads.
Related: Deficit Reduction--Far Less Than Meets the Eye
The largely split-the-difference agreement would boost discretionary spending for most domestic and Pentagon programs to $1.012 trillion in the current fiscal year, compared to the $967 billion in spending under the current law, after sequester cuts were scheduled to take effect in January. Spending would total $1.014 trillion in fiscal 2015, which begins next Oct. 1.
The largely split-the-difference agreement would boost discretionary spending for most domestic and Pentagon programs to $1.012 trillion in the current fiscal year, compared to the $967 billion in spending under the current law, after sequester cuts were scheduled to take effect in January. Spending would total $1.014 trillion in fiscal 2015, which begins next Oct. 1.
The compromise also offsets the
additional spending with increased fees on airline passengers, added
pension costs for new federal employees and members of the military and
other gimmicks. And–as a sop to Ryan and the Republicans–it includes
measures that would result in a net deficit reduction of $23 billion
over the next 10 years, although much of those savings would come at the
tail end of the decade.
Ryan spent Thursday fending off
Republican criticism of his plan – including from Sen. Marco Rubio,
(R-FL) a potential presidential rival in 2016. In summing up his defense
of the bill he worked out with Murray prior to the final vote, Ryan
declared, “This is good government. It’s also divided government. And
under divided government, we need to take steps in the right direction.
And to make divided government work, you can’t ask each other to
compromise on core principles. Because we don’t do that here. We ask
each other to find some common ground to advance the common good. And
that’s what this agreement does.”
Boehner, who for months seemed
spineless in regularly bowing to demands of arch conservative and Tea
Party members of his conference on the budget, debt ceiling and
Obamacare, has been masterful in the past day or two in putting his
conservative nemeses in their place.
Yesterday he began to push back
against conservative critics who complained the deal permits too much
new spending, puts off further deficit reduction for years, and allows
back-door taxation with increased airline passenger fees to cover
security costs.
The conservative groups are
threatening to challenge Republican lawmakers in primaries next year if
they go along with a compromise that violates conservative fiscal and
budgetary tenets. But Boehner declared he was disgusted with these
groups dictating policy to his members – a political dynamic that over
the past three years has fostered partisan gridlock, repeated threats of
default on the U.S. debt and a 16-day government shutdown in October.
“They are using our members, and they are using the American people for their own goals,” Boehner said. “This is ridiculous.”
“The psychology of this is
fascinating,” said Larry Sabato, a University of Virginia political
scientist. “Speaker Boehner stuck to the party line in October that the
government shutdown was necessary and warranted, and would produce a GOP
win. He knew better even then.”
“The shutdown was unmitigated
disaster for Republicans,” he added. “The longer Boehner has had to stew
in the bitter juices of that folly, the angrier he has gotten at those
who put him in an unwinnable position. The Speaker now senses that
enough of the GOP House rank-and-file got tired of being political
piñatas in October, and so now he can say what he really thinks about
the conservative groups that pushed the House off the cliff.”
Meanwhile, in the Senate,
McConnell and other senior Republican leaders are resisting the budget
deal, insisting that it increases spending too much without requiring
more immediate cuts in return, according to Politico. McConnell –
who is facing a potentially difficult reelection campaign next year and
is wary of offending Tea Party adherents, is widely expected to oppose
the proposal. His top leadership deputies also raised concerns on
Wednesday, highlighting a growing cleft within the party over budget
policy.
“I’m not happy about busting the
spending caps,” said John Cornyn of Texas, the Senate GOP whip.
“Particularly, all along, I said that if that was going to happen, it
would have to be for something really meaningful in terms of shoring up
Social Security and Medicare. It looks like it will just increase fees,
which is another way to increase spending.”
There is little doubt that the
Senate can pass the budget resolution next week when it comes up for a
vote, especially since at least a handful of Republicans are certain to
join with the majority Democrats to pass the legislation and send it on
to President Obama for his signature. But the showdown is breeding bad
blood among the Republicans.
Yesterday, the conservative
Republican Study Committee, a group of the most conservative members of
the House, fired Teller, its longtime executive director, accusing him
of leaking conversations with lawmakers to his allies among the outside
conservative groups and actively working again RSC strategies.
Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA),
chairman of the Republican Study Committee, told reporters that he fired
Teller, the RSC executive director, because he no longer had the
“trust” of lawmakers. “We all rely on staff, but we have to have the
full trust of our staff. Unfortunately, that’s no longer the case,”
Scalise said.
Passage of the bipartisan deal
will undoubtedly reverberate throughout the party for months to come,
and potentially serve as a distraction from the GOP’s relentless attacks
on Obamacare.
The outside conservative groups
will try to punish some members for a ‘yes’ vote on the budget deal, but
the larger the number of GOP ayes, the harder it will be to wage
primary war on the whole bunch of them, according to Sabato.
“Most Republican House members
will get a pass—this time,” he said. “Further deviations from the
groups’ set of principles will result in more human sacrifice in
primaries or a lack of November funding.”
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