For any enemy of the United States — foreign or domestic — who hoped Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign would help grind the federal government to a halt, the GOP’s intraparty dispute over House speaker should be a welcome sight.
In the interest of transparency, I have enjoyed watching Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., squirm during this highly publicized and highly embarrassing saga. But increasingly, Democratic lawmakers who have every reason to share my glee have expressed concern over the consequences of a congressional chamber rendered effectively useless by this dysfunction.
On Wednesday, for example, I watched Democratic Rep. Colin Allred of Texas remind MSNBC’s Hallie Jackson that he’s technically still a representative-elect, because the new Congress hasn’t been sworn in. Allred said he’s not even sure whether lawmakers will be paid for this period of political purgatory. There are all sorts of matters being held up in Congress, sending a message of chaos and incompetence to foreign adversaries like Russia, China and Iran.
More than six years after Trump’s successful presidential bid, and roughly two years after he was ousted from office, the tentacles of Trump’s governmental sabotage are live and in effect. Sure, he publicly endorsed McCarthy for speaker, but an overwhelming majority of the “Never Kevin” detractors in the House GOP caucus are lawmakers whose campaigns were backed by Trump.
Among them are Eli Crane of Arizona, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Byron Donalds of Florida, Andrew Clyde of Georgia and more than a dozen others. They’re all mere appendages of the anti-government monster Trump has enlivened in the GOP.








