Republicans Talk Ousting Speaker Johnson Amid Spending Deal Fervor
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- January 10, 2024
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Hold us accountable by rating this article's fairness Some Republicans in the House of Representatives have discussed vacating House Speaker over the spending agreement he made with Democrats over the weekend. Johnson could face the same fate as his predecessor after some conservative members of were outraged over the speaker's budget deal with Democratic leadership, struck in an attempt to avoid a partial government shutdown as the January 19 funding deadline nears.
The Louisiana Republican was appointed 56th speaker of the House of Representatives in October 2023 after was the same month, also after negotiating with to try to avoid a government stoppage. On Sunday, Johnson, Democrats Majority Leader and House Minority Leader announced a tentative agreement that would establish an overall spending level of nearly $1.66 trillion in 2024, similar to the bipartisan deal struck last year between President and McCarthy, despite cuts noted by Johnson in a letter to Congress.
The speaker said the agreement slashed $16 billion in spending, according to his letter to colleagues, which, he said, "represents the most favorable budget agreement have achieved in over a decade." reached out via email on Tuesday night to Johnson's office for comment. Johnson's deal was met with swift backlash from some of who have been calling for much steeper budget cuts, with roughly a dozen House Republicans vocally condemning the spending deal.
The conservative House Freedom Caucus blasted the agreement as a "total failure." Representative , a Texas Republican and policy chair of the Freedom Caucus, has been a vocal critic of the tentative budget agreement. Appearing on BlazeTV's on Tuesday, Roy said he'd consider filing a motion to vacate Johnson over the deal.
"I'm leaving it on the table," Roy said. "I'm not going to say I'm going to go file it tomorrow night. I'm not saying I'm not going to file it tomorrow. I think the speaker needs to know that we're angry about it." When asked about the possibility of removing Johnson from office, Representative Tim Burchett, a Tennessee Republican, told reporters on Tuesday that "a lot of people were talking about it." Representative Victoria Spartz, an Indiana Republican, told on Tuesday night that "people here and there" have been seriously considering ousting the speaker.
"Ultimately, it's up to us members to be able to pull the gun," Spartz said. "It's not even just the Speaker. We'll have to figure it out and be strong. Ultimately, Mike [Johnson] needs to show that he can win. He definitely inherited a difficult situation, so we'll judge the result." Spartz told that Republicans need to up their game and force Democrats to negotiate on spending totals.
"I think Republicans really need to become serious and force Democrats to the table because inflation, higher spending, and taxes are going to be destructive for our country," the congresswoman said. Representative , a South Carolina Republican, told that she hasn't heard the motion to vacate calls from her colleagues.
However, she offered a warning for fellow Republicans on the deal. "We're looking at $50 trillion in debt in the next 9 1/2 years, so Republicans are going to be just as much at fault as Democrats with record high spending that is going to continue to harm our economy and hardworking middle class families," Mace said.
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