Advertisement

Dems share blame for mess in the House

Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries missed a chance to use the crisis to push for a more bipartisan governing model.

Bloomberg Opinion
October 6, 2023 at 10:30PM
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) delivering remarks during a press briefing after the House approved a stopgap plan to avert a government shutdown that was less than 12 hours away, at the Capitol in Washington on Saturday, Sept. 30, 2023. (KENNY HOLSTON, New York Times/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Advertisement

Opinion editor's note: Star Tribune Opinion publishes a mix of national and local commentaries online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.

•••

Kevin McCarthy's ejection from his seat as speaker of the U.S. House — an ignominy that hadn't been attempted in more than a century — is a national embarrassment that deepens the Republican Party's descent into dysfunction and extremism.

But the fact is: The blame rests not just with the eight Republicans who voted to oust McCarthy, but also with both party's leaders — McCarthy and Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries — for failing to reach across the aisle to save the country from this mess.

Over the past several election cycles, I have strongly supported Democratic efforts to win the House, largely to save the country from the dysfunction and craziness of a party that has fallen captive to its extreme right wing. I disagree with McCarthy on virtually every issue. But in some critical moments this year, he showed that he was willing to stand up to his party's right-wing extremists and take the heat.

Jeffries should have been willing to take the same risk, by rising above partisanship to save McCarthy's job — if not for the good of the country, then for the good of the Democratic Party.

Jeffries' decision to let McCarthy hang himself may have allowed Democrats to feel good in the moment, but Democrats now face the prospect of a speaker who will likely be to McCarthy's right, and who will likely draw from his political demise the worst possible lesson: that the extremists must be heeded.

For the eight Republicans who ousted McCarthy, his great crime was cooperating with Democrats to keep the government open and running, and to keep the government from defaulting on U.S. debt. In other words, he governed.

Advertisement

Never mind that the agreement McCarthy reached in May to avoid breaching the debt ceiling reduced federal deficits by about $1.5 trillion over a decade and advanced several other conservative policy goals. And never mind that his refusal to shut down the government over the weekend meant that our men and women in uniform would continue to get paid for protecting our country and defending our freedoms around the world.

The right-wing extremists in Congress would rather torpedo the government than run it. And in voting out McCarthy, Jeffries and House Democrats are helping them do it.

McCarthy's failure to reach out to Democrats was inexcusable, of course. But so too was Jeffries' failure to extend an olive branch. Not only has it empowered the Republicans' extreme right wing, but it also squandered an opportunity for Democrats to increase their influence.

Jeffries had a chance to use the crisis to push for a more bipartisan governing model in the House, one that would have given Democrats more involvement in crafting legislation and conducting oversight. It could have been a transformative moment for Congress and the country. But if any informal Democratic overture occurred, it was too little, too late.

It's true that McCarthy gave no indication he would have had the good sense to accept a serious peace offering by Jeffries. But even if he had rejected it, Democrats could have shown voters that at least one party in Washington is serious about finding common ground.

The failure to make a peace offering falls heaviest on the party's moderates, who speak of bipartisanship but, when push comes to shove, don't practice it.

Advertisement

Now, with the House paralyzed, not only is Congress failing to do the people's business, but aid to Ukraine has been indefinitely paused, helping Russia's war effort and costing people their lives.

"There has to be an adult in the room," McCarthy said over the weekend, after keeping the government from shutting down with the help of Democrats. He was right. Sadly, in the end, neither he nor Jeffries could do the adult thing.

Michael R. Bloomberg is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News, U.N. Special Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions, and chair of the Defense Innovation Board.

about the writer

about the writer

Michael R. Bloomberg

More from Commentaries

See More
card image
Glen Stubbe/The Minnesota Star Tribune

Laws can be changed by future legislatures or courts. A state constitutional amendment would ensure that rights will last.

card image
card image
Advertisement