The phone calls reveal a man who is absolutely desperate to rid himself of Trump in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
“I’ve had it with this guy,” McCarthy tells the GOP leadership team on Jan. 10. “What he did is unacceptable. Nobody can defend it, and nobody should defend it.”
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No one, that is, until he ran down to Mar-a-Lago three weeks later to beg Trump’s forgiveness.
On Jan. 11, McCarthy was a little less pointed in his conversation with the wider caucus, but still talking tough.
“Let me be very clear to all of you, and I’ve been very clear to the president: He bears responsibility for his words and actions. No ifs, ands, or buts,” McCarthy said.
No ifs, ands, or buts—until he ran his hiney down to Mar-a-Lago three weeks later to beg Trump’s forgiveness.
McCarthy then told the caucus that he asked Trump directly if he bore responsibility for what happened on Jan. 6 and if he feels badly about it.
“He told me he does have some responsibility for what happened. And he need [sic] to acknowledge that,” McCarthy reported back to the caucus.
That will probably be news to Trump, the notion that he took responsibility for something—anything, really—let alone the violent Jan. 6 coup attempt.
Senate GOP Minority Leader Mitch McConnell also had some choice words on Jan. 11, telling two advisers of the impending House impeachment, “The Democrats are going to take care of the son of a bitch for us.”
According to the Times‘ Martin and Burns, McConnell told the aides he expected the Senate would convict Trump, with a strong contingent of Republicans voting accordingly. At least 17 Republicans would be needed to seal Trump’s fate if all 50 Democrats voted in favor, and McConnell clearly thought he had the votes.
But once McConnell took the temperature of the caucus, he didn’t. And ol’ masterful Mitch also didn’t have the leadership skills to deliver the votes. As McConnell recently admitted publicly, “moral red lines” aren’t exactly his thing.
“He didn’t ascend to power by siding with the minority, he explained to a friend,” write Martin and Burns.
As for McCarthy’s leadership, just two days after that Jan. 11 call with the entire GOP caucus, he pretended it never happened at his weekly press conference.
“Did you tell House Republicans on their January 11 phone call that President Trump told you he agreed that he bore some responsibility for January 6?” a reporter asked.
“I’m not sure what call you’re talking about,” replied McCarthy.
Now there’s a guy with some unshakable moral fortitude.
And so here we sit in the spring of 2022 with Trump still the 2024 GOP favorite even as he complicates the path for congressional Republicans to retake the majority. In fact, it’s not exactly clear why he would want either McCarthy or McConnell to regain control of their chambers.
The biggest guessing game on Capitol Hill Friday morning was how hard Trump would come down on McCarthy. That seems doubtful. McCarthy is a useful idiot who will do absolutely anything Trump says in his desperate bid to become speaker of the House one day.
On Friday morning, McCarthy wasn’t running around trying to rehabilitate his public image, he was madly ringing up all his colleagues to assure them that Trump isn’t angry with him, according to Punchbowl News’ Jake Sherman.
So who’s the biggest loser? Broadly speaking, both Mitch and Kev are epic losers in the leadership department. They both wanted to rid themselves of the Trump plague with every fiber of their being, and yet capitulated to him at a time when Trump was at his lowest, most vulnerable political moment since he had announced his 2016 candidacy for president.
Dooming Trump was completely within reach, and neither of them had the grit or determination to follow through. Thus, Trump is still ruling their world.
More specifically, who will be the biggest loser of Trump’s wrath? Likely McConnell, precisely because he’s not the exquisite bootlicker that McCarthy is.
McCarthy gladly and immediately laying himself belly up at Trump’s feet while McConnell doesn’t will simply remind Trump how deeply he loathes McConnell.
He’ll be coming for McConnell. Trump can throw McCarthy under the bus later.