Poor Mike Johnson. Less than a month into his new job, the Freedom Caucus has already cooked up fresh scorn for the House speaker.
While he was able to avoid a government shutdown, it appears that in doing so he brought his honeymoon as the GOP’s new leader in the House to a quick close. The far right of the Republican conference is already agitating for him to deliver on their implausible demands.
It would appear that changing the speaker hasn’t changed the Freedom Caucus’s fortunes.
On Wednesday, Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, a third-term member of the House Freedom Caucus, took to the House floor to vent his frustration. “When we come back from Thanksgiving, I’m hearing lots of promises about what we will do,” said Roy. “Let me just lay down a gauntlet here: We better damn well do it.”
But it was his excoriation of the House’s record this year that was most remarkable:
One thing. I want my Republican colleagues to give me one thing — one — that I can go campaign on and say we did. One. Anybody sitting in the complex: if you want to come down to the floor and come explain to me one material, meaningful, significant thing the Republican majority has done besides, “Well, I guess it’s not as bad as the Democrats.”
It would appear that changing the speaker hasn’t changed the Freedom Caucus’s fortunes.
Roy’s bellicosity was triggered by Johnson’s supposed betrayal of the right by passing his stopgap measure to keep the government open without any spending cuts, and relying on Democrats to help carry it over the finish line. It was the same type of short-term bill that cost Kevin McCarthy, the former speaker, his job.
Even as we’re increasingly numb to the antics of the Freedom Caucus, Roy’s speech was extraordinary for how it questioned the entire existence of the House Republican majority. It is fair to wonder whether Roy was voicing of honest frustration or, more likely, selfishly grandstanding at the expense of his Republican colleagues.
Nonetheless, Roy has a point. The House has struggled to make good on its promises. But rather than blaming Republican leadership, Roy should look in the mirror.
For years now, the House has been stuck in the same cycle that has perpetuated the status quo.
It was Roy himself who, at the start of this Congress, forced McCarthy to make a host of promises that were plainly unrealistic, including cutting spending back to 2022 levels, while Democrats control the White House and Senate.
And when it comes to putting points on the board under GOP majorities both past and present, no group has done more to undermine conservative policy than the Freedom Caucus and the like-minded members who preceded its founding in 2015.
The 2012 fiscal cliff, the 2014 border security package, the 2017 effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act all failed or moved to the left because the right deemed them insufficiently conservative and would not support them.
No issue tells the story more than government spending. The crew that has made the most noise over Congress’s failure to pass its 12 annual appropriations bills on time is the same one that has done the most to prevent them from passing.








