House GOP torpedoes Speaker Mike Johnson’s funding bill

Sepember 19, 2024

A diverse group of House Republicans torpedoed Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal to fund the government on Wednesday, September 18—dealing an embarrassing blow to the GOP leader and derailing his strategy to avoid a shutdown at the end of the month, reports The Hill.

Fourteen Republicans joined virtually every Democrat in voting against the spending plan — which paired a six-month stopgap bill with a measure that would require proof of citizenship to vote — bringing the final tally to 202-220, with two voting present. Three Democrats crossed the aisle to back the measure.

The Speaker faced a troika of GOP opposition, with hardline conservatives criticizing the use of a continuing resolution; defense hawks voicing concern about the impact the long-term funding bill would have at the Pentagon; and moderates expressing worries about having a shutdown threat so close to the election.

“I look at the spending, and I think that’s one of the largest issues that we have in our country, is $36 trillion in debt, and I look at a bill that’s continuing the excessive spending,” said Representative Beth Van Duyne (Texas), one of the GOP opponents.

The result was not a surprise: Johnson yanked a planned vote on the measure last week over widespread opposition, and a majority of those critics reiterated their resistance this week.

The vote outcome, nonetheless, is putting the Speaker in a bind. It leaves the path to averting a shutdown unclear, puts him in danger of disappointing former President Donald Trump and his conference’s right flank, and threatens to thwart his efforts to remain GOP leader in the next Congress.

Johnson, to be sure, was going to need a plan B to avert a shutdown even if the bill passed the House, since it has no chance of progressing in the Senate, where Democrats voiced opposition to the six-month timeline and the inclusion of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which Trump is demanding be included.

Democrats have noted it is already illegal for noncitizens to vote, and they have expressed concerns about placing extra burdens on eligible voters. However, Johnson, pushed ahead with the plan—which would extend funding through March 28—in an attempt to gain leverage over Senate Democrats in forthcoming negotiations.

The Speaker had remained defiant amid the growing pressure—insisting on holding a vote on the legislation despite the mounting opposition and brushing aside any notion of a plan B.

“We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play, we’re going to run the play,” Johnson said Wednesday. “We do the right thing day by day, and we have a big playbook, of course, with all sorts of ideas in it. But when you’re on the field and you’re calling a play, you run the play.”

On Tuesday, the Speaker told reporters, “I’m not having any alternative conversations.”

But with Wednesday’s failed vote officially in the rearview mirror—and the September 30 shutdown deadline inching closer—Johnson is being forced to regroup. The way forward, though, remains unknown.

Research contact: @thehill