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What do you mean? The Democrats helped the Republicans keep the government funded, which is what the majority of the GOP wanted. This is completely separate from an agreement for the Democrats to support a Speaker from the opposite party. McCarthy, like Boehner before him, would certainly never expect that without specific negotiations (which he's said he won't do, at least so far) and no minority party would grant it without significant concessions.
Shutting down the government is bad (according to Dem orthodoxy). McCarthy acted, against the Freedom Caucus jackrabbits working on making themselves ungovernable, to avoid the government shutdown. While I don't think he did so for reasons or in a way that represents a compromise with Democrats, he did act to do so. Democrats should reward that action by keeping him around. By not doing so, they make obvious to the next R Speaker that they should not act to keep the government open.
Shutting down the government is bad according to both parties. "Having a functional government" isn't some kind of concession a generous Speaker can make to the Democrats, it's literally just the majority party's job and was obviously what McCarthy and the majority of the GOP caucus repeatedly said they wanted. They couldn't achieve that, despite all 12 appropriations being fully endorsed by both Republicans and Democrats in the Appropriations Committee, specifically because of rebellion from other Republicans, so Democrats saved them and gave them the votes they needed to pass a CR.
They did this despite the fact that McCarthy had already betrayed them on the agreement he made during the debt ceiling negotiation to keep funding at certain levels, and also broke his public commitment not to launch an impeachment inquiry without a floor vote. Despite all this they still reached across the aisle and helped him anyway, only for him to hold a press conference the very next day blaming them for holding up the spending deal.
Given that he did nothing for them, repeatedly reneged on prior commitments, and even accused them of being the root problem after admitting repeatedly it was the Freedom Caucus, it is a bit rich to accuse them of a tremendous backstab against him.
Forgive me if my tone sounds peeved, I'm just somewhat exhausted listening to friends and family members explain to me how somehow the Democrats are at fault here after one of the more embarassing internal party performances ever seen. The GOP's problem right now is intraparty cohesion and it is simply never going to fix that by blaming squabbles on the other party.
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