House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said he exchanged text messages with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) on March 31 and planned to discuss spending and reforms with Ms. Greene this week.
At the time, the congresswoman declined to make the measure privileged, which would have forced a vote. Instead, she said that the motion was a “pink slip” and a warning to the House speaker, but she has not ruled out forcing a vote later. Ms. Greene said passing the spending package was “a betrayal of the American people” and “a betrayal of the Republican voters.”
In the interview, Mr. Johnson told host Trey Gowdy that he understood Ms. Greene’s frustration, but with a very narrow GOP majority in the House, sometimes the Republicans could not get the perfect bill.
“Marjorie’s a friend. She’s very frustrated about, for example, the last appropriations bills. Guess what? So am I,” Mr. Johnson said.
“These are not the perfect pieces of legislation that you and I, and Marjorie, would draft if we had the ability to do it differently. But with the smallest margin in U.S. history, we’re sometimes going to get legislation that we don’t like,” he continued.
“We were successful in getting a lot of the terrible stuff out, but a few of them made it through, and that’s what Marjorie is upset about, and I am too. But I want to talk with her about reforming the budgeting and spending process going forward.”
Ms. Greene’s move was the same maneuver used by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) against then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) in October, which ended in Mr. McCarthy’s removal from speakership.
Mr. Gaetz told reporters last month that he did not want to see Mr. Johnson go, saying, “If we vacate this speaker, we'll end up with a Democrat speaker.”
Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) agreed. “If we were to kick him out, you might as well just give the gavel to Hakeem,” he said, referencing House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.).
During the Fox News interview, Mr. Johnson stressed that Ms. Greene’s action is a distraction from the GOP’s goal. “I think all of my other Republican colleagues recognize this as a distraction from our mission. Again, the mission is to save the republic. And the only way we can do that is if we grow the House majority, win the Senate, and win the White House. So we don’t need any dissension right now,” he said.
Ukraine Bill Might Risk Johnson’s Speakership
In another move, Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) says he’s gotten a commitment from Mr. Johnson to hold a vote on supplemental assistance to Ukraine.However, Ms. Greene is an outspoken critic of funding Ukraine, and any move by Mr. Johnson to bring a vote on such legislation could be met with a forced vote on the motion to vacate.
“It is very likely that after this Ukraine bill, we may have a standoff with the speaker. I hope the speaker prevails,” Mr. Bacon said. “He’s doing the right thing. It’s in our national security interest that Ukraine remain independent.”