It took House repugicans less than a day to
meltdown, as America’s most dysfunctional political disgrace has
collapsed under weight of their own fighting after John Boehner is
seeking revenge on those who voted against him to be Speaker of the
House.
The rebellion against Boehner grew overnight, and an
election, which the repugican leader thought he had in the bag, became
a close contest. Boehner could afford to lose the votes of 29 repugicans, but a higher than expected 25 repugicans voted against
him. The twenty-five repugicans who voted against Boehner were Justin
Amash (MI), Brian Babin (TX), Rod Blum (IA), Dave Brat (VA), Jim
Bridenstine (OK), Curt Clawson (FL), Scott DesJarlais (TN), Jeff Duncan
(SC), Louie Gohmert (TX), Paul Gosar (AZ), Chris Gibson (NY), Scott
Garrett (NJ), Tim Huelskamp (KS), Walter Jones (NC), Steve King (IA),
Thomas Massie (KY), Mark Meadows (NC), Rich Nugent (FL), Gary Palmer
(AL), Bill Posey (FL), Scott Rigell (VA), Marlin Stutzman (IN), Randy
Weber (TX), Daniel Webster (FL) and Ted Yoho (FL).
Boehner didn’t waste time getting revenge on those who tried to throw him out of the speakership. Politico reported,
“After he secured his third term as speaker Tuesday afternoon, losing
25 votes on the House floor to some relative-unknown members of the
House repugican coven, Boehner moved swiftly to boot Florida's Daniel Webster and Rich Nugent from the influential Rules Committee.
The reason was simple: Webster ran against Boehner for speaker,
distributing fliers outlining his candidacy and talking about how he
would better adhere to the House rules than the Ohio repugican.”
Boehner’s allies are suggesting that this was only
the beginning of the revenge campaign that repugican leaders have
planned for those who tried to oust Boehner.
All of the talk of a more unified group of House repugicans that was circulating right after the elections in November
quickly evaporated after the Speaker of the House vote. Deep divides
remain within in the repugican circus, and the record number of
defections from Boehner could be the first sign that the House repugican circus will spend the next two years teetering on the brink
of collapse.
The big takeaway from the first day of the 114th
Congress is how little things have changed. This group of fractured and
divided repugicans stands no chance against an increasingly popular and
powerful president who has the economic winds at his back and a
Democratic congressional minority at his side.
The repugicans wanted this congressional majority, and
it took them less than a day to show the American people why giving it
to them may turn out to be an error that they will regret.
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