Trump pulled the rug out from under the ambitious Elise Sefanik
Awwww šššā It's tough to be Elise Stefanikā
An New York Intelligencer report by Ed Kilgore:
There was one catch, though: Stefanikās confirmation by the Senate (expected to be a breeze) was postgponed until after April 1, when two House vacancies in Florida created by earlier Trump appointments (Matt Gaetz as attorney general, briefly, and Michael Waltz as White House national security adviser) would be filled by a special election. Before then, the fragile GOP majority in the House meant Stefanik had to stay in that chamber to supply her vote on big measures like the House budget resolution and the continuing resolution that kept the federal government running.
Once those were out of the way, and two new Floridians sworn in, Stefanik would finally be able to head to the U.N. building and take the next step up the ladder that some figured would eventually make her a presidential possibility herself.
Once those were out of the way, and two new Floridians sworn in, Stefanik would finally be able to head to the U.N. building and take the next step up the ladder that some figured would eventually make her a presidential possibility herself.
But just a few days before the Florida special elections, lightning struck, via a Trump post on Truth Social:
So instead of strutting her stuff on the international stage and burnishing her ārising starā image, Stefanik will be stuck in the House as just another slave to Trumpās every whim.
What happenedā Well, if Trump is telling the truth š¤„(never a givenš§), there remains the fear that even with fresh troops from Florida, the margin in the House is too narrow for comfort with the āone big, beautiful billā implementing the presidentās legislative agenda still on tap and not sure to reach the House floor until late spring or even summer.
With Stefanikās seat vacated and with a Democratic governor of New York able to delay filling it for some time, all it would take is two or three defections (depending on absences) to screw everything up and derail tax cuts, budget cuts, a debt-limit increase, and all the other weighty items planned for the budget reconciliation bill.
What you have to wonder is why this situation wasnāt evident before Stefanik was nominated, as GOP senator Lisa Murkowski remarked shortly: "They just figured that out NOWā"
The perilous situation of House Republicans was actually worse at the beginning of this Congress, before two House Democrats died.
Are there new jitters about Mike Johnsonās ability to manage his troops? Is it possible Republicans are afraid theyāll lose one of those Florida special elections, or perhaps the New York special election Stefanikās departure would have triggered? Is the myth of Trump 2.0 as a fast-moving and irresistible force crushing all opposition perhaps slightly hollow? Or is this all a ruse and the extremely ambitious House Republican Conference chair said or did something to displease the man upstairs (meaning Trump, not God)?
Thatās unclear, but for the moment it sucks to be Elise Stefanik. Not that long ago she was on the shortlist to become Trumpās running mate and presumptive political heir. Now sheās a prisoner of the House, a body that is determined to surrender all its power to Russell Vought and Elon Musk.
Itās true that Trumpās thunderbolt, by taking away her nice new job, included an explicit suggestion that she will ājoin my administration in the future,ā and thatās no small thing, particularly given the high likelihood that the GOP will lose control of the House in 2026, making House Republicans even less significant than they are today.
But who knows what the future will bring and which jobs will be open when Stefanikās mere floor vote stops being essential? Nah, it would have been better if the New York representative had arranged to be first in line to quit her House seat after the election.
Thatās unclear, but for the moment it sucks to be Elise Stefanik. Not that long ago she was on the shortlist to become Trumpās running mate and presumptive political heir. Now sheās a prisoner of the House, a body that is determined to surrender all its power to Russell Vought and Elon Musk.
Itās true that Trumpās thunderbolt, by taking away her nice new job, included an explicit suggestion that she will ājoin my administration in the future,ā and thatās no small thing, particularly given the high likelihood that the GOP will lose control of the House in 2026, making House Republicans even less significant than they are today.
But who knows what the future will bring and which jobs will be open when Stefanikās mere floor vote stops being essential? Nah, it would have been better if the New York representative had arranged to be first in line to quit her House seat after the election.
Labels: Ed Kilgore, Intelligencer, New York Magazine
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