Comment: Trump got the speaker he ordered from Republicans

The new speaker isn’t there to legislate; he’s there to keep Trump out of jail should he lose the 2024 election.

By Francis Wilkinson / Bloomberg Opinion

The chaos of October has brought the House GOP back to where it began: Some guy is once again speaker of the House. His name is, for now, Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana, not that it matters. If Donald Trump tells him to change it, as when Trump ordered Republican Party chairman Ronna Romney McDaniel to drop the “Romney” from her moniker, Mike Johnson will become Speaker Sammy Skeever or Mike Maloney.

Unlike previous speaker candidates in recent weeks, such as Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, Johnson has gone to the trouble of acquiring some actual policies to inform his cultural reaction. Not that the policies matter, either. No one, least of all Republicans, thinks that the GOP is capable of legislating. If all goes well, the party that has organized itself around Trump’s voluble lies and seething rage will keep the government open and fund whatever the White House and Senate work out. If all doesn’t go well, the House GOP, having recommitted itself to lawlessness and deceit, will precipitate another existential crisis for American democracy.

More than anything, the great GOP Speaker fiasco of 2023 has been a lengthy tribute to the godlike supremacy of the MAGA king. “MAGA is ascendant,” far right radical Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida told podcaster Steve Bannon. In that, it mirrors the degrading GOP presidential primary, in which candidates run, sort of, for an office that has already been assigned. Trump, after all, has already picked the party’s presidential nominee. He more or less picked the speaker, too.

When Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota made a dash for the speaker’s chalice three weeks into the jungle trek, Trump took a few seconds from a busy day trying to stay out of jail to destroy Emmer’s political life. It was quick, vicious work, like watching a hound seize a gopher and instantly snap its neck. Emmer meekly withdrew.

What ultimately matters is that Trump has an obedient speaker who supported Trump’s attempted coup after he lost the 2020 election by 7 million votes. Johnson, or his replacement if Johnson doesn’t last, must be poised to perform a similar duty if Trump fails again in 2024. Anyone unwilling to overthrow the republic and keep Trump out of jail is a MAGA enemy. They must be purged.

Rep. Jim Jordan, the demagogue from Ohio, showed the way even in defeat. With the support of MAGA thugs who threatened holdouts on Jordan’s behalf, Jordan reached 200 votes — more than a dozen shy of what he needed — in the GOP conference before faltering in his own quest for the speakership. Some claimed the threats backfired. It’s an encouraging story, suggesting the ever-shrinking minority of small “r” republicans in the GOP conference had found a backbone. For some, it was no doubt true. But in a secret vote, with no death threats to focus their minds, GOP House members abandoned Jordan en masse. It seems the threats worked pretty well after all. ” Hang Mike Pence” isn’t just a MAGA slogan; it’s the template for intraparty politicking.

Every Republican action now is shaped by Trumpism and the political desperation and cultural panic that birther-ed it. The entire GOP presidential field flits in and out of Trump’s giant shadow. The new Speaker will have to pledge fealty to the full panoply of Trumpist depravity. As Trump’s legal peril comes increasingly into focus — crimes, already well documented, are now being admitted by various Trump thugs — the job of servicing the MAGA king will grow more complex and demanding.

Under Republican leadership, the House of Representatives has been a reactionary backwater that periodically shuts down in fits of rage. The Speaker’s contest has been another giant step into political degeneracy. Still, the party is not technically dysfunctional. The GOP House is only an embarrassment if you are under the mistaken impression that House Republicans are there to serve the national interest. Emphatically, they are not. They are there to serve the MAGA lord, whose personal goals are dependent on the success of his authoritarian goals. And, truly, by that measure, House Republicans are not doing such a bad job.

Francis Wilkinson is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering US politics and policy. Previously, he was executive editor for the Week and a writer for Rolling Stone.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Sunday, Nov. 17

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2019, file photo, Washington Supreme Court Justice Steven González listens to testimony during a hearing in Olympia, Wash. González has been elected as the next chief justice of the Washington state Supreme Court. He was elected by his colleagues on Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, according to a news release sent by the court. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)
Editorial: Daunting fix to fund right to public defenders

With a court system in crisis, threatening justice, local governments say they can’t pick up the tab.

Jon Holden, center, president of District 751 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, greets members in Seattle on Monday night, Nov. 4, 2024. Even with a strike ending, Boeing and its new chief executive face a daunting to-do list, including improving quality and increasing production of its commercial planes.  (M. Scott Brauer/The New York Times)
Comment: Was Boeing contract unions’ last big win for now?

With a change in presidential administrations, organized labor may face more obstacles ahead.

Some of us do appreciate journalism

I feel compelled to reply to a recent Catherine Rampell column about… Continue reading

Providence General Children’s Guild, gift shop making difference

As president of Providence General Children’s Association, I want to thank our… Continue reading

Eco-nomics: U.S. picks poor time to reverse climate efforts

The election of Trump, who considers climate change a hoax, will frustrate U.S. efforts. Yet, there’s hope.

Comment: What an independent sees as the dust settles

We agree on core issues; can we agree to find respect for each other’s perspectives and beliefs?

Killer whales not trapped in nets during the 1970 Penn Cove capture stayed near penned kin until the last one was hauled away on a truck. (Wallie Funk/Whidbey News-Times file)
Editorial: After 50 years, the message in orcas’ Penn Cove return

The return by L pod, following deadly roundups in 1970-71, should serve as a reminder of responsibility.

FILE — Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-Wash.) on a ride-along with a Skamania County paramedic captain near Carson, Wash. on Feb. 26, 2024. Perez, who is on track to win re-election in her rural Washington district, says her party needs to stop demonizing others and recruit candidates from diverse backgrounds. (M. Scott Brauer/The New York Times)
Editorial: What Washington state’s results say about election

Both parties should consider what state voters had to say on the economy and government investments.

AquaSox centerfielder Jared Sundstrom throws the ball to a cutoff man during a game against the Vancouver Giants on une 5, at Funko Field in Everett. (Ryan Berry / The Herald file photo)
Editorial: Keep AquaSox in Everett with a downtown ballpark

The school district park has served team and city well, but a new park offers economic power-hitting.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Saturday, Nov. 16

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

RGB version
Editorial cartoons for Friday, Nov. 15

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.