WASHINGTON – Have a fixin' for some chicken?
House Republicans seem to, as evidenced by the thousands of dollars the conference has spent at Chick-fil-A during the 114th Congress.
The spending details, made available by the House's chief administrative officer, show the Republican conference purchased food 18 times from the Atlanta-headquartered fast food chain since this Congress began in January 2014.
In total, the House GOP has spent $32,400 on the chicken (and possibly biscuits and waffle fries, too). At $79 for a large plate of "Chick-n-Strips," that's enough to feed at least 500 people per purchase (after taxes).
Speaker Paul Ryan's office has also dropped some cash at the restaurant — $2,500 during May and June of this year.
No matter how much Republicans on the Hill like breaded chicken, it's hard to ignore the political connection between the party and the fast food chain. Chick-fil-A, which famously closes on Sundays, was in the national spotlight in 2012 when its president, Dan Cathy, spoke out against gay marriage.
Asked via e-mail whether the chain's politics had anything to do with the caucus' choice to order there, House Republican conference spokesman Nate Hodson said only that "Chick-fil-A is easy to order; reliably delivered on time; cheaper than in-house options; and tastes good."
Cathy has donated a handful of times to political candidates, according to FEC filings. This cycle, he contributed $2,700 — the maximum amount allowed — to conservative Georgia businessman Jim Pace, who narrowly lost the Republican primary election to replace outgoing GOP Rep. Lynn Westmoreland.