The Daily - Democrats’ Plan to Save the Republican House Speaker
Episode Date: March 27, 2024Against all odds and expectations, Speaker Mike Johnson keeps managing to fund the government, inflame the far right of his party — and hold on to his job.Catie Edmondson, a congressional correspond...ent for The Times, explains why it might be Democrats who come to his rescue.Guest: Catie Edmondson, a congressional correspondent for The New York Times.Background reading: Ultraconservatives immediately turned on Mr. Johnson after Congress passed spending legislation.Enraged over the spending bill, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene began the process of calling for a vote to oust the speaker.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, against all odds and expectations, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson keeps
managing to fund the government, inflame the far right of his party, and still hold on to his job.
Now, as he prepares for his riskiest move to date,
I speak with my colleague, Katie Edmondson, about why it may be Democrats who save his speakership.
It's Wednesday, March 27th.
Katie, I'd like to start with this dramatic scene that played out in the House of Representatives a few days ago.
You happened to be in the room for it, so just describe it.
That's right.
Well, I was sitting in the press gallery in the House chamber Friday morning
watching for a spending vote to go through.
And instead, what caught my attention was Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene,
the far-right lawmaker from Georgia, striding down the center of the aisle on the House floor. And she marched up
to the House clerk's desk and she put a piece of paper into the hopper, into the basket for
legislation that sits on the House clerk's desk. It immediately set off a rumor mill about what
that piece of paper potentially could be. And sure enough, minutes later, we learned that
she was essentially
taking the first step in the process to call a snap vote to oust Speaker Mike Johnson.
And minutes later, Congresswoman Greene walks down the House steps where I and a number of
other reporters were waiting. This is a betrayal of the American people. This is a betrayal of
Republican voters.
And she said what set this into motion was that Speaker Mike Johnson had just again relied on
Democrats to push through a spending bill to keep the government funded. This bill was basically
a dream and a wish list for Democrats and for the White House. It was completely led by Chuck
Schumer, not our Republican speaker of the House.
That many Republicans, in fact, a majority of Republicans in the conference opposed.
Our country is in crisis and we need real leaders that know how to fight, that know how to walk in a room
and don't get rolled by the deep state and don't get rolled by the Democrats.
She said that Mike Johnson needed to be put on notice.
I am saying the clock has started.
It's time for our conference to choose a new speaker.
Do you believe that there are more Republicans who support this?
At which point, those of us watching from home are all thinking to ourselves, here we go again.
about to lose another House speaker to angry far-right House Republicans, who of course deposed the last speaker, Kevin McCarthy, in the fall for similar ideological offenses,
not being far-right enough.
On first glance, it does seem like a case of deja vu, but I actually think that this
instance is going to turn out to
be very different than the last iteration of this we saw with Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
Why would that be, Katie? Why do we think it's not going to be the deja vu that it really looks like?
Well, I think to understand the full arc or the full trajectory of his speakership,
we kind of have to rewind back to when he was initially elected speaker. And if you remember, when he was elected in October,
this was seen as a really big victory for the far right. As a rank and file member,
Congressman Mike Johnson was super conservative, a super evangelical Christian, anti-abortion, anti-spending.
Far-right Republicans felt that they had just elected really one of their own to the speakership,
someone who was going to bow to their preferences and bring them to the table in a way that they
felt Speaker Kevin McCarthy never really did. And we got our first test as to how Speaker Johnson was going to manage the far right flank of his conference
almost immediately when he had to decide whether he was going to keep the government funded.
Right. This was exactly the same situation that Kevin McCarthy found himself in.
That's right. And look, it was not a foregone conclusion that he would follow in former Speaker Kevin McCarthy's footsteps. I had questions when he was initially elected as to
whether he would let parts of the government shut down, whether he would allow a total government
shutdown to show the far right that he really was one of them, to show that he was going to put up
this fight. And in fact, he did the opposite over and over again over the next five months when he
was faced repeatedly with these funding deadlines. Each time he made the calculation, we are not
going to let the government shut down. He made the calculation that if he wanted to keep the
government funded, he knew with his razor-thin
majority he was going to have to turn to Democrats for votes. And that's what he did.
Right. And what you had told us when that was happening was allowances were being made for
Johnson from the far right because he was one of them. But the question was, how long could he claim to be one of the far right
when he was repeatedly, in their eyes, betraying them
by working with Democrats to get spending bills passed
that this far right group of lawmakers hated?
Yeah, that's right.
Congress ended up having to pass all of these short-term stopgap spending bills
to keep the government funded.
They kept kicking the can down the road.
And that brings us to this vote on Friday on the latest spending bill that he had to push through.
It was the final package to make sure the government is funded through this fiscal year.
This package included bills to fund the Department of Homeland Security, which obviously has been a huge touchpoint for them in terms of their dissatisfaction with what's happening at the southern border.
So this was always going to be a very politically tricky tranche of packages for negotiators to get through.
And what ends up being proposed in this final spending bill to keep the government open?
Well, it ends up looking kind of like an old school compromise bill and that no one is entirely happy with it,
but that there are wins for both parties to take home and sell to their base.
to their base. And so for Democrats, they got $1 billion in new spending for child care subsidies,
for low-income families, for Head Start, early education. And for conservatives, there was a lot of additional money in this bill to beef up security at the southern border. So that was
more money for additional border patrol officers, more money for
additional detention beds, for immigration enforcement facilities. So on paper, it seems
as though, you know, this is a bill that at least moderate or more centrist Republicans will be able
to get behind. Right. But in fact, what we see on the House floor when this bill is put to a vote is that not only do the far right Republicans in the conference oppose it, but actually a majority of Speaker Mike Johnson's conference opposes the bill.
And why was that? $2 trillion was the price tag on this bill. And that is just a really big number for lawmakers
to wrap their heads around, particularly if you are a conservative member who has been saying for
months that you want the Republican speaker to use their gavel to try to reduce federal spending.
Got it.
And so in order to pass this bill, Speaker Johnson again relies on almost all Democrats really to push this through.
And when the vote is done and tallied, we see that more than half of his conference has in fact opposed this bill.
They voted it down.
Right. What you have told us in the past, Katie, is an important mathematical equation. When less than half of Republicans vote on something proposed by a Republican speaker,
it is basically considered the political equivalent of a cardinal sin.
Yeah, that's right. I mean, the unofficial rule within the House Republican Conference
is that a Republican speaker is not even supposed to allow a vote on legislation if he knows that
less than half of his conference supports it.
So that's how we get to Marjorie Taylor Greene putting this piece of paper in the hopper,
starting this process of attempting to oust Speaker Johnson.
Yeah, that's right.
So we're back to this question of why isn't this likely to be the beginning of the end
for Johnson? It certainly looks like he has done the deed
that would cost him his job here.
Well, one of the interesting things
about this whole situation
is that Congresswoman Greene
has intentionally structured this bill that she filed
to essentially leave this threat
lingering over Speaker Mike Johnson's head.
This is going to be a slow boil.
She's not calling for an immediate snap vote. This is going to be a slow boil. She's not calling for
an immediate snap vote. She's going to kind of let it linger and let him squirm a little bit.
Right. But the other thing is that it's not clear that the math is on her side. Obviously,
after she did this, we immediately went and asked Republicans who voted to oust McCarthy if they were on board for a second go,
essentially. And a lot of them were very squeamish about the idea. It's very unclear
whether Marjorie Taylor Greene even has the support within the Republican conference to
oust Mike Johnson. But of course, if you remember, a huge factor in all of this is what Democrats decide to do.
Right.
When it came to the ouster of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Democrats ultimately decided, sure, we're going to join in with this motion to oust him.
And it's not clear that that's the case for Mike Johnson at all.
been conversations internally among Democrats for weeks, even before Marjorie Taylor Greene files this resolution, talking about maybe they should try to save him if someone does try to
oust him. And why would that be? Because it's deeply unintuitive. Democrats trying to save
this House speaker. They didn't do it last time. Why would they do it with Johnson?
Well, the first thing to say is that, honestly, a lot of Democrats genuinely and personally
despised former Speaker Kevin McCarthy in a way that they don't with Speaker Mike Johnson. Hakeem
Jeffries, the Democratic leader, told us last month that they view Mike Johnson as more of a blank slate. But it goes
beyond that. I don't think Democrats would save Mike Johnson for free, so to speak.
And what would be their price?
Well, their price would be for Speaker Mike Johnson to allow aid for Ukraine to come to a vote on the
House floor. This is a huge priority for Democrats to
make sure that the United States continues to help Kiev fend off Russian aggression that they are now
talking about. If Speaker Johnson were to allow that to come to a vote, if it were to pass,
it might be enough for them to cross party lines and vote to save Mike Johnson if a Republican tried to oust him.
We'll be right back.
Katie, you just said that Speaker Johnson
might end up being saved by House Democrats
because he may push through funding for
Ukraine. But my recollection is that Speaker Johnson has been hugely resistant to passing
funding for Ukraine. He's avoided doing it over and over and over again. So help me understand that.
That's right. As a rank and file congressman, he repeatedly voted against sending aid to Ukraine. And within the first
few months of his speakership, we saw it was an issue that he just really did not want to touch,
that he did not want to bring up aid for a vote, really did not want to talk too much about his
thinking on it. But over the past few weeks, we started to see some of his calculations on Ukraine start to change.
In what way?
Well, it's been kind of interesting to watch the tightrope that he's walking here,
because publicly, initially, he was keeping his statements very vague.
He'd never really wanted to address Ukraine aid specifically.
But I started to hear in private conversations behind closed doors, he started sounding much attended a fundraiser last month that the speaker attended,
in which he gave what sounded like really kind of a rousing monologue about how he is a Reagan Republican.
He believes in peace through strength.
He believes the United States has a role to play on the global stage when it comes to fending off authoritarians. He said
Putin is a madman and the United States has a role to play and we're going to do our job.
We start hearing that he is making sort of similar comments to lawmakers. And this all,
I think, comes to a head at the end of last week. And he puts out a statement saying, when lawmakers return to Washington from their Easter recess, we are going to consider aid for Ukraine.
And what explains why Speaker Johnson would suddenly want to fund Ukraine and kick yet another hornet's nest in the pantheon of things that the far right
does not like? Well, part of it is that Senate Democrats had already called Speaker Johnson's
bluff on this issue. So starting late last year, he had tried to put off a vote on Ukraine aid in
the House by saying that in order to bring up the issue,
Democrats first needed to agree to sweeping changes on the border, thinking probably the
Democrats would never agree to it. Instead, Senate Democrats went ahead and actually negotiated a
deal when Speaker Johnson rejected that package and Senate Republicans followed his lead and
voted it down.
And so now when it comes to Ukraine, Democrats are looking at Speaker Johnson and saying,
OK, you know, we gave you what you wanted. What's your excuse now for not letting this aid come
to a vote? Right. But I also think one of the big things that's changed here for
Mike Johnson as speaker is that he is now carrying this very heavy responsibility.
He has talked to donors about how shortly after being elected Speaker, how he went to the
Situation Room and he received these briefings from the President's cabinets on the situation
in Ukraine. He is now meeting with all of these leaders of NATO countries. And so part of the message that he is hearing when he's in these rooms with Biden officials, NATO allies, is do you really want to be a person who is solely responsible for blocking this aid from getting to Kyiv? That is a really heavy message to internalize.
So what we should understand to have perhaps happened to Speaker Johnson when it comes to
Ukraine is a little bit of the journey he seems to have gone on when it comes to these spending
bills, which is he has come to terms with the true stakes of his job, of what it means to not just be a far-right member of the House, but the Speaker of the entire institution.
And as a result, is ready to, or seemingly ready to, make some pretty big ideological leaps.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
ideological leaps. Yeah, I think that's exactly right. Essentially, as soon as he became speaker, he was met with these high stakes occasions, the first of which making sure the government did not
shut down. Now he is being forced to confront this question of whether to continue sending aid to
Ukraine. And his decision on that, putting some sort of aid package to a vote,
will probably be the most politically risky move he's ever made.
Hmm. Why is that even riskier than the spending bills, for instance?
The issue of sending aid to Ukraine has become such a toxic issue for Republican voters. It's a deeply emotional issue, to be honest with you,
in a way that spending just is not. There's some component of, I think, among Republican voters,
a sense of unfairness, right? Why are we sending this money to another country instead of spending
it on our own citizens? That really resonates for people. And Republican lawmakers certainly are
acutely aware of this. But as you've told us, Johnson has made it clear that he will take up
this money for Ukraine very soon. So my question is, how does he do that in a way that could
possibly get through the House without triggering a vote to oust him? Or if it does trigger a vote to oust him,
which perhaps inevitably it would,
how does he ensure that Democrats
who want this Ukraine funding like this bill enough
that they will cross party lines and save him?
Well, there's a whole menu of options being considered,
and it's my understanding that the speaker himself
has not really circled around any one particular option.
What Democrats would love to see him do would be to just put the Senate passed aid package on the floor for a vote.
But at the same time, that is exactly what Republicans would hate to see him do. And so we're now in this realm where Speaker Johnson is searching for a path forward
that is going to incite the least amount of backlash from his own conference, but also
hopefully keep Democrats happy enough that they potentially would still vote to save him
from an ouster if it came to that. Katie, it sounds like no matter what this
Ukraine funding package ultimately looks like,
it's going to need a lot of Democratic House votes to pass, and that these far-right Republicans
like Marjorie Taylor Greene will be furious. And this could very well, I have to imagine,
be the moment that a lawmaker like her says, that's it. We are done with Mike Johnson.
And if she succeeds in trying to do that, I know the math is wonky, but if she succeeds, I'm curious how Democrats are going to ultimately make the decision
of whether to take the unprecedented step of saving a Republican House speaker.
Well, that would be quite the scenario. I think what it would look like is a long series of probably quite intense discussions among the Democratic caucus where they would have to weigh, do we feel like Mike Johnson was an honest broker here?
Did he deliver for Ukraine?
And look, you know, Michael, a lot of them have for weeks now individually been floating the idea that they would vote to save him if he did, quote
unquote, the right thing on Ukraine.
And so I would have to think that these promises would also weigh pretty heavily over their
calculations, because what is the point of trying to get things done in a sort of coalition
government if you pull the rug out under the leader at the last
moment. There's a word you just used that feels very important in thinking about this moment,
Katie, and it's the word coalition. We tend to think of our government, especially the House,
as deeply partisan, Democrat, Republican. But time and again over the past year, year and a half,
what we're seeing, because the chamber is so closely split,
is something resembling coalition government in foreign countries, where these occasional
cobbled-together groups that seem very unexpected get things done. And if that were to happen with
Ukraine, especially, it starts to feel like we have something resembling a somewhat functioning House of Representatives.
Does that feel right?
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, you have to remember, again, let's not give them too much credit.
This is a very low bar that we're talking about here.
You know, we've been calling it a governing coalition, but it's really more of an emergency system to keep everything from going off the rails, right? This is making sure the government is not shut down and potentially a coalition emerging to continue sending aid to a democracy that is fending off the advances of an authoritarian.
said, I think you are right to point out that time and time again on these important decisions,
the far right has essentially boxed themselves out of discussions because it's become very clear that they will not support anything that really could become law. And it is a stark departure
from where they started the beginning of the year. I remember when it became very clear that
House Republicans were going to have the majority, but that it was going to be a tiny majority, where they started the beginning of the year. I remember when it became very clear that House
Republicans were going to have the majority, but that it was going to be a tiny majority.
A lot of these Freedom Caucus members crowing about the fact that this was going to force
the Republican speaker into going into coalition government with them. It would force the Republican
speaker to bow to their preferences, to their whims.
And instead, what we've seen is the opposite.
They have pushed the Republican speaker, whether it is Kevin McCarthy or Mike Johnson,
into the arms of Democrats, and in the process kind of rendered themselves powerless.
Right. Instead of holding their speaker hostage, instead of holding the entire House hostage and really dictating the terms of these Caucus, who just says no to everything all the time, then you essentially deal yourself out of the process at key moments.
And the end result of it has been that everyone else in Congress has decided the only way to move forward is to work around them.
Well, Katie, thank you very much.
We appreciate it. Thanks, Michael.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
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The case revolves around a lawsuit brought by anti-abortion doctors and groups who accused the FDA of unlawfully expanding
access to mifepristone, which is used in about 60% of abortions. But both conservative and liberal
justices, including Justice Katonji Brown Jackson, questioned whether the small group of doctors
challenging the FDA had suffered the type of direct harm
that would give them the legal grounds
to bring the case in the first place.
They're saying because we object
to having to be forced to participate in this procedure,
we're seeking an order preventing anyone
from having access to these drugs at all.
And I guess I'm just trying to understand
how they could possibly be entitled to that
given the injury that they have alleged.
And authorities are blaming the collapse
of a major bridge in Baltimore
on a cargo ship that had lost power
moments before it collided with the structure.
The collapse occurred at around 1.30 a.m. on Tuesday
and sent at least eight construction workers into the water below.
Six of them are still missing.
The ship's crew had issued a mayday call shortly after losing power,
giving officials a chance to stop cars from crossing the bridge, and
likely preventing an even greater tragedy.
Today's episode was produced by Olivia Nat, Ricky Nowetzki, and Jessica Chung.
It was edited by M.J.
Davis-Lynn, with help from
Rachel Quester. Contains
original music by Dan Powell,
Alicia Baitube, and
Marion Lozano, and was
engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim
Brunberg and Ben Landferg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.