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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 2, 2023

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Welcome to day three in the United States House of Representatives quest to choose a speaker. Previous thread here. Yesterday ended a little abruptly, with the House reconvening at 8 pm only to immediately adjourn until noon today. Word on the street is the Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) was worried someone was going to nominate Steve Scalise (R-LA) for the Speakership and that Scalise would be a compromise candidate who could defeat McCarthy. Allegedly a deal was reached overnight that will bring some 10 or so dissenters to McCarthy's side but, unfortunately for him, that will still not be enough for him to win. In order to get an outright majority (assuming all members vote) McCarthy needs to get 17 of the 21 Republicans not currently voting for him.

Interestingly it seems some of these Republicans are not even looking for rule changes, they are just Never-McCarthy. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), for example, told the news yesterday that he was prepared to vote "every hour, every day, every week, but never for [McCarthy]". If four other Republicans feel similarly I believe that will be enough to deny McCarthy the Speakership in perpetuity. Having other McCarthy supporters vote "Present" to decrease the total needed doesn't work because McCarthy loses votes faster than the threshold decreases. The "Present" voters would need to either be among the five opposed to McCarthy or among Democrats, both of which seem unlikely to me.

ETA:

At the end of the seventh ballot the results stand at:

Jeffries - 212

McCarthy - 201

Donalds - 19

Other - 1

Present - 1

Matt Gaetz was the Other vote and cast his vote for Donald John Trump. It seems the alleged compromise failed to actually move any of the dissenters against McCarthy, including Victoria Spartz (R-IN) who has voted Present in the last few ballots. Nor has anyone nominated Scalise yet. We're now looking at 4 ballots across two days with basically identical results. Well and truly in a stalemate.

ETA 2:

At the end of the eighth ballot the results stand at:

Jeffries - 212

McCarthy - 201

Donalds - 17

Other - 3

Present - 1

Few more Other votes this time. Two for Kevin Hern (R-OK) and one for Trump again. Seems holdouts may not be sold on Donalds but aren't coming around to McCarthy. Wish we could skip the nominating speeches (who are not convincing anyone) and move to a speedier method of voting than this call and response. Heard rumors after the first vote that McCarthy wanted to adjourn but the Dems + holdouts probably wouldn't let them (need a majority to adjourn).

ETA 3:

According to a CNN reporter quoting Rep-Elect Michael Lawler (R-NY) the 18 Republican Members of the House that were elected in districts Biden won in 2020 are not moving from Kevin McCarthy as Speaker. So if these 18 won't vote for anyone other than McCarthy and at least 5 other members will never vote for McCarthy then it's impossible for the Republicans to get anyone over the majority line.

ETA 4:

At the end of the ninth ballot the results stand at:

Jeffries - 212

McCarthy - 200

Donalds - 17

Hern - 3

Other - 0

Present - 1

Ken Buck (R-CO) did not vote. We've now passed the number of ballots the last time there were multiple ballots in a Speaker election. This is officially the longest Speaker selection by ballot count since 1859. That election took 44 ballots. Probably see adjournment after this though I'm unsure until when. Pretty convinced at this point there is nothing McCarthy can offer that's going to get the holdouts to vote for him and I'm unclear if there's a non-McCarthy candidate that could get a sufficient number of votes unless McCarthy himself drops out. Probably House adjourns after this for dinner although until when I could not say.

ETA 5:

At the end of the tenth ballot the results stand at:

Jeffries - 212

McCarthy - 200

Donalds - 13

Hern - 7

Other - 0

Present - 1

Ken Buck (R-CO) did not vote. Kevin McCarthy fails to secure the Speakership for the 10th time. Looks like Republican dissenters might be migrating from Donaldson to Hern. No movement between any of the three coalitions (Dems/McCarthy/Other). Might be more votes depending on where the votes stand for adjournment.

ETA 6:

At the end of the eleventh ballot the results stand at:

Jeffries - 212

McCarthy - 200

Hern - 7

Trump - 1

Other - 12

Present - 1

I think just about all the Other votes were for Donalds, not sure why no one re-nominated him. Something darkly amusing about back room deals going while these votes are counted because members need to be on the floor to vote and don't have the votes to adjourn, so they have to retire to their private meeting rooms in the brief period when they can.

ETA 7:

On a 219-213 vote, with one Republican joining the Democrats, the House is adjourned until noon tomorrow.

There’s something infuriating about a protest vote for Trump. Is it supposed to represent anything other than pandering?

I’ll second Mr. Deuterium in asking why.

A protest vote is intended as a signal. But I do not understand what is being signaled by this particular gesture. It’s not the traditional “X really deserved this,” or its opponent, “These all suck even more than X.” Just injecting the Donald into an unexpected situation.

Edit: it feels like advertising where I’m not the intended customer. Is this how other people feel about woke super bowl ads??

"Business as usual is not coming back. Either our concerns get addressed, or we will burn this entire system to the ground."

This isn't burning the system down, this is getting the Democrats elected in 2024.

Personally, I think the organized efforts of the media, big tech, and the federal security apparatus to both conceal truths harmful to democrats and propagate lies harmful to Republicans is probably what, if anything, is going to get the Democrats elected in 2024. Be that as it may, the thing where establishment Republicans get to enjoy the delights of elected office is part of the system in question.

...This is generally where moderates of various stripes claim that such tactics have a cost, disrupting the vital, necessary work of our legislative bodies. A reasonable claim! I'd be interested to hear what clear good that legislative body has accomplished in the last, say, ten years? Twenty? More? Can you make a case for the accomplishments of our august legislative body?

Personally, I think the organized efforts of the media, big tech, and the federal security apparatus to both conceal truths harmful to democrats and propagate lies harmful to Republicans is probably what, if anything, is going to get the Democrats elected in 2024.

It's kind of weird how that didn't get enough Democrats elected in 2022.

Or 2016.

Or 2014.

Or 2010.

Is it your contention that the current state of affairs, the players involved, their ideological commitments, and the state of the infrastructure employed were identical in 2016, 2014 and 2010 as they are now? If so, I think you are mistaken. Things change. Changes can be observed, and trends noted. Further, is it your understanding that election shenanigans are either utterly decisive, or completely nonexistent? Is it not possible for such interference to simply provide a significant statistical advantage?

In any case, FBI interference in the 2016 election is now a matter of public record. I'm going to take a wild guess and say you probably think it's fine for the federal security services to collude with Twitter, facebook, google, and most major media corporations to manipulate the information available to voters. That's your choice, of course, doubtless made easier by the apparent lack of any downside to such an assertion. Others disagree, but what are they going to do about it?

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