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McCarthy moves on ouster maneuver

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Oct 03, 2023 View in browser
 

By Garrett Ross

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Speaker Kevin Mccarthy is set to bring forward a resolution that could end in his ouster this afternoon. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY is putting his speakership on the line today.

The embattled GOP leader is expected to call up a vote on the House floor this afternoon on the motion to vacate that Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) has threatened against him, setting up a high-stakes showdown between the Republican rivals that could end in McCarthy’s ouster from power.

The state of play: McCarthy told his conference in a private meeting this morning that he would bring the resolution (which is actually a motion to table the motion to vacate) up this afternoon. McCarthy can manage no more than four Republican defections on the votes, assuming every Democrat declines to support McCarthy.

So what about the Dems? House Minority Leader HAKEEM JEFFRIES and his fellow Democrats won’t swoop in to save McCarthy, the Democratic leader stated in a Dear Colleague letter this morning, leaving the decision entirely in Republicans’ hands.

“We are ready, willing and able to work together with our Republican colleagues, but it is on them to join us,” Jeffries told reporters today. Read Jeffries’ Dear Colleague letter 

There was chatter that a cohort of centrist Dems might join forces with McCarthy to pad his numbers, but our colleagues Sarah Ferris and Nicholas Wu spoke with half a dozen of the key faction this morning, who said that McCarthy had “given them no incentive to salvage his besieged speakership.”

McCarthy’s mood: Speaking to reporters at the Capitol this morning, McCarthy plainly stated the difficult math that he faces:

“If five Republicans go with Democrats, then I’m out,” he said, prompting ABC’s Rachel Scott to reply: “That seems likely.” McCarthy responded, simply: “Probably so.”

What else McCarthy is saying:

  • “They haven’t asked for anything. I’m not going to provide anything,” he told CNBC, regarding Democrats potentially brokering a deal to save him
  • “That doesn’t work,” he told reporters at the Capitol today about a potential power-sharing agreement with Democrats

The anti-McCarthy group: Reps. ELI CRANE (R-Ariz.), BOB GOOD (R-Va.), TIM BURCHETT (R-Tenn.) and Gaetz.

Interestingly, Rep. VICTORIA SPARTZ (R-Ind.) said in a post on X that she will vote to allow the motion to vacate to come up on the floor for a vote, but she ultimately won’t vote to oust McCarthy once the motion to vacate is brought forward.

Others to watch:

  • Rep. ANDY BIGGS (R-Ariz.) — who tweeted yesterday against McCarthy but later said he was unaware of the post made by his staff.
  • Rep. ANDY OGLES (R-Tenn.), who has not said how he will vote, is floating potential successors in a post on X.

So what comes next? Should McCarthy indeed go down on the motion to vacate, a process for choosing a new speaker would commence. Our colleagues report that no clear name has emerged as a replacement for McCarthy.

And then there’s this: “Many Republicans have vowed to renominate McCarthy to the position and not allow the House to adjourn until he retakes the speakership,” WaPo’s Marianna Sotomayor, Amy Wang, Leigh Ann Caldwell and Paul Kane report.

Follow along with our ace Hill team for all the latest drama on Inside Congress Live

HEADS UP — “Hunter Biden pleads not guilty on federal gun charges,” by NBC’s Katherine Doyle in Wilmington, Del.

Good Tuesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at [email protected].

 

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CONGRESS

WELCOME TO WASHINGTON — LAPHONZA BUTLER’s selection by California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM to fill the seat of the late Sen. DIANNE FEINSTEIN was a shocker to many close political watchers — and, it turns out, something of a surprise to Butler herself. She told the LA Times’ Taryn Luna and Hannah Wiley that she was in Colorado late Saturday night for a work trip when she found out from Newsom about the decision. “I had not talked to anyone: Not the governor, not the governor’s team,” Butler told LAT. “I was unaware that my name was even seriously being considered. And it’s been a sort of whirlwind ever since.” She will be sworn in at 3 p.m. today.

WHERE THE GRASS IS GREENE-R — “In Marjorie Taylor Greene’s backyard, shutdown politics is complicated,” by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Greg Bluestein

2024 WATCH

THE TRUMP TEST — When Trump was in the White House, he privately mused about using military force to strike against Mexican drug cartels without Mexico’s consent — an idea that was panned by his advisers at the time given its drastic and inflammatory nature. Fast-forward to now: “Trump’s notion of a military intervention south of the border has swiftly evolved from an Oval Office fantasy to something approaching Republican Party doctrine,” NYT’s Jonathan Swan, Maggie Haberman, Charlie Savage and Emiliano Rodríguez Mega write.

PROTECTING THEIR PIECE — “RNC warns Christie and Ramaswamy not to hold joint Fox News segment,” by Meridith McGraw: “The warning, relayed to POLITICO by a person familiar with the conversations, had an effect. The candidates and network have decided to change up the format. Instead of appearing side-by-side, they will now sit for two separate, back-to-back segments. The RNC approved of the new format, according to another person familiar with the matter and granted anonymity to discuss it freely.”

 

GROWING IN THE GOLDEN STATE: POLITICO California is growing, reinforcing our role as the indispensable insider source for reporting on politics, policy and power. From the corridors of power in Sacramento and Los Angeles to the players and innovation hubs in Silicon Valley, we're your go-to for navigating the political landscape across the state. Exclusive scoops, essential daily newsletters, unmatched policy reporting and insights — POLITICO California is your key to unlocking Golden State politics. LEARN MORE.

 
 

ALL POLITICS

SPEAKING THE LANGUAGE — Campaign operatives are starting to target young voters using Spanglish — the colloquial mix of Spanish and English — in an effort to tap into a voting bloc that could swing things for certain candidates in 2024. “Among those introducing Spanglish in their messaging is Bold PAC, the campaign arm of the Democratic-aligned Congressional Hispanic Caucus,” WaPo’s Mariana Alfaro reports, noting that the advantage is that “the U.S. political system has a vocabulary that at times can be difficult to translate to Spanish without sounding awkward or forced.”

JUDICIARY SQUARE

MR. AND MISSES SMITH — DOJ special counsel JACK SMITH gets the WaPo Style section treatment, from Manuel Roig-Franzia, who digs into the prosecutor’s past. The topline takeaway? “The unrelenting aggressiveness that is his greatest strength is also Smith’s greatest weakness.”

“Alongside his legal victories — and there have been many in three decades of prosecutorial activity large and small (he once nabbed a birthday party clown turned stickup artist dubbed the Lotto Bandit) — his willingness to push into areas that more risk-averse prosecutors would not have touched has undone him more than once. In some of his biggest cases — going after senators, a governor, a notorious cop killer — he reached for an outcome that he could not achieve.”

COMING TO THE COURTS — “Young People Left in Limbo as Battle Over Transgender Care Shifts to Court,” by NYT’s Ernesto Londoño and Mitch Smith: “The political and legal chaos is likely to be resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court, which currently has a 6-to-3 conservative majority and has long been an arbiter on questions of the rights of L.G.B.T.Q. people. In the meantime, transgender minors across the country are left in limbo, unsure if they will be able to fill their next prescription for puberty blockers or hormone therapy.”

SCOTUS WATCH — “Supreme Court Case Could Upend Rules for Mortgages, Credit Cards and More,” by WSJ’s Andrew Ackerman and Jess Bravin: “A lawsuit before the Supreme Court on Tuesday could threaten more than a decade’s worth of rules governing the mortgage industry, credit cards, student-loan companies and more. A group of payday lenders will argue before the court that some rules written by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are invalid because the funding system Congress designed for the agency in 2010 was unconstitutional.”

 

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BEYOND THE BELTWAY

AFTERNOON READ — “How red-state politics are shaving years off American lives,” by WaPo’s Lauren Weber, Dan Diamond and Dan Keating: “Americans are more likely to die before age 65 than residents of similar nations, despite living in a country that spends substantially more per person on health care than its peers. Many of those early deaths can be traced to decisions made years ago by local and state lawmakers over whether to implement cigarette taxes, invest in public health or tighten seat-belt regulations, among other policies, an examination by The Washington Post found.”

Read the mainbar: “An epidemic of chronic illness is killing us too soon,” by WaPo’s Joel Achenbach, Dan Keating, Laurie McGinley, Akilah Johnson and Jahi Chikwendiu

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — “A Rural Michigan Town Is the Latest Battleground in the U.S.-China Fight,” by NYT’s Alan Rappeport: “Firestorms over Chinese investments, like a battery factory in Green Charter Township, are erupting as officials weigh the risks of taking money from an adversary.”

Related read: “China Is Suffering a Brain Drain. The U.S. Isn’t Exploiting It,” by NYT’s Li Yuan

POLICY CORNER

FED UP — “The Fed Seeks to Up Its Influencer Status,” by WSJ’s Suryatapa Bhattacharya: “‘Hi, I’m Jay Powell.’ JEROME POWELL, the chairman of the Federal Reserve and one of the most influential people in the country, launched the central bank’s new Instagram account with a video, known as a reel, announcing its newest social-media outreach.” Watch the video

GIVE ME LIBERTY — “Liberty University broke safety laws for years, government asserts,” by WaPo’s Susan Svrluga

 

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PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVES — Amy Fiscus is joining WaPo as deputy national editor. She previously was deputy editor of The Morning at the NYT. The announcement … Kyle Pope, who has been editor and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review since 2016, is leaving to join Covering Climate Now, an organization that works with newsrooms and reporters to emphasize climate coverage. More from the AP

TRANSITIONS — Payton Fuller is now press assistant for House GOP Conference Vice Chair Mike Johnson (R-La.). She previously was staff assistant for Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.). … Jon Wolfsthal is now director of global risk at the Federation of American Scientists. He previously was a senior adjunct fellow at the Center for a New American Security in the Transatlantic Security Program.

WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Sam Finnerty, a partner and government contracts lawyer at PilieroMazza, and Jennie Wolfe, CEO of WellWolfe Coaching & Training, got married Saturday in Cape Charles, Va. They met in D.C. through mutual friends. Pic … Another pic

— Kate Vibbert, senior political strategist at The New Media Firm, and Danny Shelton, who works at Aisle 518 and is a Mark Kelly alum, got married Saturday at Blue Hill Farm in Waterford, Va. Justin Jenkins, who introduced the couple at Ivy & Coney in 2017, officiated. Pic … SPOTTED: Rob Flaherty, Brenna Crombie, Josh Cook and Anna Tuman, Gladis Merino, Jeff Holmes, Toby and Laura Fallsgraff, Phil Kim, Atanu Chakravarty, Jonah Allon, Lily Ross, Sarah Flowers and Dylan Arant.

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Correction: Yesterday’s Playbook PM misidentified a Democrat running in a swing New Jersey House seat. Her name is Sue Altman.

 

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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