Eleven defeats in Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s (R-Calif.) speakership bid is about what it should take to carry the job, said Fox News’ Tucker Carlson on Jan. 5, adding that “accountability” is a key factor in the ongoing Republican standoff.
McCarthy, the party favorite from California, has been blocked by up to 20 hardliners out of the 222 House Republicans over the past three days from commanding the speaker’s gravel in the 118th Congress. Staunchly conservative members say he hasn’t performed well in the past as a minority leader and will not institute changes they see as necessary if he assumes the speakership.
But Carlson thinks otherwise.
“If there’s one thing that Washington hates, on a bipartisan basis, it’s accountability. And unfortunately, the Republican Party is no different in that. No one is ever punished for failure or ever forced to explain how those failures happen,” the conservative political commentator added. “And as a result of that lack of accountability, no one ever improves. Everybody just keeps getting rewarded for producing the same disasters.”
Carlson cited the GOP’s disappointing performance in the midterms, which he said McCarthy shares responsibility for.
Republican leaders in Washington “have no plan to change. They'd like to ignore what happened in November and move on as if everything is fine,” Carlson said. “Republican voters see the same people in charge producing the same mediocre results, paying a lot more attention to lobbyists than to them. That’s not democracy. Actually, it’s the opposite of democracy,” he continued.
Carlson said that McCarthy could eventually become the new House speaker “by default” when a deal is reached, given the lack of a viable challenger.
“Here’s the critical thing to know,” said the host. “If he does become speaker, by the time he becomes speaker, Kevin McCarthy will have learned a lot. Kevin McCarthy will have publicly acknowledged his failures. He will have been forced to face the people he has disappointed both within the Congress and outside of it. And he will have promised to change.”
Stalemate
Such remarks came as House Republicans failed for a third day in a row since Tuesday to vote McCarthy into the speaker’s chair. Voting resumed at noon on Friday.New York Democrat Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, on the other hand, received the votes of all 212 members of his party in every single count beginning on Jan. 3, to be House minority leader.
‘Messy by Design’
Many have called the House GOP struggle a win for democracy, despite McCarthy repeatedly falling short of the votes he need.“Sure, it looks messy,” said Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) in a Wednesday speech nominating McCarthy for speaker. “But democracy is messy—by design,” the Wisconsin Republican continued.
“That’s a feature, not a bug, of our system,” Gallagher said. “We air it all out in the open for the American people to see because, at the end of the day, the president is not in charge, the Supreme Court is not in charge, speaker of the house is not even in charge. The American people are in charge.”
“Having a deliberative discussion(it is messy at times) but in the long term, is in the nation’s best interests,” the Florida congressman said later on Twitter on Tuesday. “When the dust settles, we will have a Republican Speaker. Now is the time for our conference to debate and come to a consensus. This will take time.”
During the twelfth vote on Friday, Donalds flipped his vote back to McCarthy.
While Trump, who has endorsed McCarthy for speaker, called on Republicans to unite behind the Californian earlier this week, the former president shared a slightly different perspective on Thursday.
“I actually think that a big Republican VICTORY today, after going through numerous Roll Calls that failed to produce a Speaker of the House, has made the position & process of getting to be Speaker BIGGER & MORE IMPORTANT than if it were done in the more traditional way,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
“Freedom can be frustrating, sloppy, slightly uncontrollable and amazingly creative. That is the joy of being an American,” Gingrich added.
The Epoch Times has reached out to McCarthy’s office for comment.