Lard ass was all in on McCarthy with his endorsement on 1-4-23 and also pushing for R. McDaniels as RNC head.
Gaetz is still pissed J. Jordan didn’t want to be speaker and he couldn’t stop McCarthy from holding the gavel. His beef should be with Trump. But he’s too busy kissing his ass.
And apparently Harmeet Dhillon wasn’t interested in kissing Trump’s ass like McDaniels was. Hence no support from him for the clearly superior option. McDaniels is a GD disaster.
0-2.
Trump is meaningless. His websites mean nothing. Remember?
Gaetz just made the DIMS case that the GOP can not be trusted with the majority. But, but, but it helps Trump says the fanboy.
LOL….
You can't read polls or the room
Turns out DeSantis was the cult all along
You’re absolutely broken over 2020. You’re cheering on the DIMS winning today. You’ve become a sad angry old man.
The democrats won when they made a deal with McCarthy and then voted him out
I'm looking at 2024 and who can win. I remember when that mattered
You and Ron are running on 2020
How's that going?
Gaetz handed the DIMS the tool. Trump’s handpicked guy was just done in by 7 of his crazies.
Please explain how Gaetz is the crazy one. He's the only one that actually willing to use his leverage, which is really all we wanted McCarthy to do.
For some, Ukraine border > US border. For some Ukraine, Cartel and US Chamber of Commerce $ > Doing the right thing. Only weapon we have is to shut down the grift. Some people have no interest in that.
So McCarthy went full on Cuck Schumer with the the House Conservatives and then expected them to let him come in their mouth and like it. Say hi, Marco. Anyway.
"The reason we got to this point was a failure of Kevin McCarthy. All he had to do to avoid where we are was keep his word, keep his commitment and at least fight for that, but he did not do that in August," one of the McCarthy opponents told The Epoch Times before the vote. "He dillied and he dallied and stopped and started and couldn't decide. He was a feckless leader who didn't cast a vision to drive us to do that, to get those spending bills through. That's what he should have done, that's what he promised to do but he didn't," the representative said. He was referring to Mr. McCarthy's promises when he was elected speaker in January to cut federal spending back to pre-COVID levels, to avoid at all costs resorting to continuing resolutions (CRs) or omnibus spending bills, and instead return the House to "regular order." The regular order of both chambers in Congress is to write a dozen major spending bills in committees during the spring, then debate, amend, and finally pass them in the summer and early fall before the Sept. 30 end of the federal government's fiscal year. Advertisement - Story continues below Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) But Mr. McCarthy abandoned those promises, according to the opponents, in dealing with President Joe Biden in April by agreeing to a debt ceiling increase packet that also assumed federal spending would continue at or very near the hyper-levels that began in 2020 under President Donald Trump in response to the pandemic. Then after April, House Republicans were slow to move the 12 major appropriations bills, and when the traditional August recess approached, Mr. McCarthy was pressured by many of his most conservative colleagues to keep the House in session to work on the spending measures rather than allowing members to return to their home districts. But Mr. McCarthy declined to cancel the recess. When the final week before the Sept. 30 deadline arrived, it brought with it the prospect of the federal government having to shut down for lack of a budget for 2024. Mr. McCarthy opted to seek a CR that would give the House enough time to finish passing the spending bills. Four of the twelve were passed, accounting for 74 percent of all discretionary federal spending. Advertisement - Story continues below The speaker offered a 30-day CR on Sept. 29 that would have cut federal discretionary spending by 8 percent and mandated stronger measures by the Biden administration to secure the U.S. southern border with Mexico. But Mr. Gaetz and 20 other Republicans voted against it, killing it. On Sept. 30, the speaker offered a 45-day CR that kept current spending levels and it passed, thanks to Democrats voting with 91 Republicans in favor. Ninety-one GOPers opposed the 45-day CR. "That was the last straw," another representative told The Epoch Times, because it all but rendered Mr. McCarthy's January promises irrelevant, and put the House back on course to being forced by Senate Democrats and the president into agreeing to kick the can down the road yet again. The last time Congress approved all 12 major spending bills in regular order was 1997.
So McCarthy went full on Cuck Schumer with the the House Conservatives and then expected them to let him come in their mouth and like it. Say hi, Marco. Anyway.
"The reason we got to this point was a failure of Kevin McCarthy. All he had to do to avoid where we are was keep his word, keep his commitment and at least fight for that, but he did not do that in August," one of the McCarthy opponents told The Epoch Times before the vote. "He dillied and he dallied and stopped and started and couldn't decide. He was a feckless leader who didn't cast a vision to drive us to do that, to get those spending bills through. That's what he should have done, that's what he promised to do but he didn't," the representative said. He was referring to Mr. McCarthy's promises when he was elected speaker in January to cut federal spending back to pre-COVID levels, to avoid at all costs resorting to continuing resolutions (CRs) or omnibus spending bills, and instead return the House to "regular order." The regular order of both chambers in Congress is to write a dozen major spending bills in committees during the spring, then debate, amend, and finally pass them in the summer and early fall before the Sept. 30 end of the federal government's fiscal year. Advertisement - Story continues below Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) But Mr. McCarthy abandoned those promises, according to the opponents, in dealing with President Joe Biden in April by agreeing to a debt ceiling increase packet that also assumed federal spending would continue at or very near the hyper-levels that began in 2020 under President Donald Trump in response to the pandemic. Then after April, House Republicans were slow to move the 12 major appropriations bills, and when the traditional August recess approached, Mr. McCarthy was pressured by many of his most conservative colleagues to keep the House in session to work on the spending measures rather than allowing members to return to their home districts. But Mr. McCarthy declined to cancel the recess. When the final week before the Sept. 30 deadline arrived, it brought with it the prospect of the federal government having to shut down for lack of a budget for 2024. Mr. McCarthy opted to seek a CR that would give the House enough time to finish passing the spending bills. Four of the twelve were passed, accounting for 74 percent of all discretionary federal spending. Advertisement - Story continues below The speaker offered a 30-day CR on Sept. 29 that would have cut federal discretionary spending by 8 percent and mandated stronger measures by the Biden administration to secure the U.S. southern border with Mexico. But Mr. Gaetz and 20 other Republicans voted against it, killing it. On Sept. 30, the speaker offered a 45-day CR that kept current spending levels and it passed, thanks to Democrats voting with 91 Republicans in favor. Ninety-one GOPers opposed the 45-day CR. "That was the last straw," another representative told The Epoch Times, because it all but rendered Mr. McCarthy's January promises irrelevant, and put the House back on course to being forced by Senate Democrats and the president into agreeing to kick the can down the road yet again. The last time Congress approved all 12 major spending bills in regular order was 1997.
Sounds so bad that 7 GOP House Reps voted with all of the DIMS to oust him.
Gaetz was in the House when Trump increased our debt by $7.8 Trillion.
Lard ass was all in on McCarthy with his endorsement on 1-4-23 and also pushing for R. McDaniels as RNC head.
Gaetz is still pissed J. Jordan didn’t want to be speaker and he couldn’t stop McCarthy from holding the gavel. His beef should be with Trump. But he’s too busy kissing his ass.
And apparently Harmeet Dhillon wasn’t interested in kissing Trump’s ass like McDaniels was. Hence no support from him for the clearly superior option. McDaniels is a GD disaster.
0-2.
Trump is meaningless. His websites mean nothing. Remember?
Link to where I’ve said that please?
You and I both know RD is a fucking disaster and Trump got her re-elected. He was all in on McCarthy. Those are facts you can’t dodge with this BS.
Comments
I'm looking at 2024 and who can win. I remember when that mattered
You and Ron are running on 2020
How's that going?
My question got page jumped, just bumping it again for your answer.
Also, please name some meaningful accomplishments that McCarthy has achieved.
I'm happy. Let it burn
So McCarthy went full on Cuck Schumer with the the House Conservatives and then expected them to let him come in their mouth and like it. Say hi, Marco. Anyway.
https://archive.ph/CX4Ft#selection-1211.0-1301.86
"The reason we got to this point was a failure of Kevin McCarthy. All he had to do to avoid where we are was keep his word, keep his commitment and at least fight for that, but he did not do that in August," one of the McCarthy opponents told The Epoch Times before the vote.
"He dillied and he dallied and stopped and started and couldn't decide. He was a feckless leader who didn't cast a vision to drive us to do that, to get those spending bills through. That's what he should have done, that's what he promised to do but he didn't," the representative said.
He was referring to Mr. McCarthy's promises when he was elected speaker in January to cut federal spending back to pre-COVID levels, to avoid at all costs resorting to continuing resolutions (CRs) or omnibus spending bills, and instead return the House to "regular order."
The regular order of both chambers in Congress is to write a dozen major spending bills in committees during the spring, then debate, amend, and finally pass them in the summer and early fall before the Sept. 30 end of the federal government's fiscal year.
Advertisement - Story continues below
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) during a hearing in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Dec. 18, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
But Mr. McCarthy abandoned those promises, according to the opponents, in dealing with President Joe Biden in April by agreeing to a debt ceiling increase packet that also assumed federal spending would continue at or very near the hyper-levels that began in 2020 under President Donald Trump in response to the pandemic.
Then after April, House Republicans were slow to move the 12 major appropriations bills, and when the traditional August recess approached, Mr. McCarthy was pressured by many of his most conservative colleagues to keep the House in session to work on the spending measures rather than allowing members to return to their home districts. But Mr. McCarthy declined to cancel the recess.
When the final week before the Sept. 30 deadline arrived, it brought with it the prospect of the federal government having to shut down for lack of a budget for 2024. Mr. McCarthy opted to seek a CR that would give the House enough time to finish passing the spending bills. Four of the twelve were passed, accounting for 74 percent of all discretionary federal spending.
Advertisement - Story continues below
The speaker offered a 30-day CR on Sept. 29 that would have cut federal discretionary spending by 8 percent and mandated stronger measures by the Biden administration to secure the U.S. southern border with Mexico. But Mr. Gaetz and 20 other Republicans voted against it, killing it.
On Sept. 30, the speaker offered a 45-day CR that kept current spending levels and it passed, thanks to Democrats voting with 91 Republicans in favor. Ninety-one GOPers opposed the 45-day CR.
"That was the last straw," another representative told The Epoch Times, because it all but rendered Mr. McCarthy's January promises irrelevant, and put the House back on course to being forced by Senate Democrats and the president into agreeing to kick the can down the road yet again.
The last time Congress approved all 12 major spending bills in regular order was 1997.
Can’t.
Stop.
Laughing.
Gaetz was in the House when Trump increased our debt by $7.8 Trillion.
When you can’t get MTG to join the crazies you’ve jumped the shark. Gaetz is a fucking clown.
MELTDOWN.
https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/matt-gaetz-kevin-mccarthy-house-speakership-10-03-23/index.html
Boom!
You and I both know RD is a fucking disaster and Trump got her re-elected. He was all in on McCarthy. Those are facts you can’t dodge with this BS.
You're irate
Revenge is a dish enjoyed
I am
Watching your uniparty get destroyed
So do you.
Obviously he wasn't up to it
Nor are you
TugCons joined the DIMS today.