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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.