Newly elected House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) says that the first bill he wants to see passed is one to cut back funding for 87,000 new IRS agents, following a several-day-long fight over the speaker’s gavel.
“I know the night is late, but when we come back, our very first bill will repeal the funding for 87,000 new IRS agents,” McCarthy said on Jan. 7, moments after being nominated as speaker. McCarthy didn’t say exactly when the Republican-backed bill would be introduced on the House floor but said Republicans “believe government should be to help you, not go after you.”
But the Republican National Committee and a number of Republican lawmakers have criticized recent funding for the IRS under the Inflation Reduction Act that passed both chambers of Congress in 2022. They’ve argued that the IRS would target Americans with more and more audits to fund large spending packages that have recently passed Congress.
“The Inflation Reduction Act finally provides the funding to transform the IRS into a 21st-century agency,” Yellen said in September 2022. “While all the improvements won’t be done overnight, taxpayers can expect to feel real differences during the next filing season.”
While Republicans have a majority in the House, they don’t have a majority in the 51–49 Senate. Passing the measure to repeal the recent IRS funding could face roadblocks in the upper chamber, while President Joe Biden could move to veto the GOP’s measure.
“As speaker of the House, my ultimate responsibility is not to my party, my conference, or even our Congress,” McCarthy said after he was voted in as speaker. “My responsibility, our responsibility, is to our country.”
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Before being elected, McCarthy agreed to major concessions to secure a role that’s second in line to the Oval Office behind Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, including a rule that means that any of the 435 members of the House could force a vote for his removal at any time.Republicans’ weaker-than-expected performance in the November 2022 elections left them with a narrow 222–212 majority, giving several conservative lawmakers the chance to block McCarthy’s bid. They accused him of being soft and too open to compromise with Biden and the Democrats.
“We do not trust Mr. McCarthy with power, because we know who he will use it for. And we are concerned that it will not be for the American people,” Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) said last week.
However, McCarthy shrugged off claims that deals with those Republicans could weaken his power. “That gives me no problem or concern whatsoever,” McCarthy told reporters, describing his deal with critics as a “very good” agreement that “empowers the members.”
Throughout the vote, former President Donald Trump reportedly leaned on some of the Republican holdouts, while repeatedly saying that Republicans should back McCarthy. In response, Gaetz told Fox News, “I love President Trump, I defended him a great deal in Congress, but HR wasn’t always his strong suit.”
Gaetz added that several of Trump’s Cabinet picks, including former Attorneys General Jeff Sessions and William Barr and former Defense Secretaries Jim Mattis and Mark Esper, didn’t “always advance an America first policy.”