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marmar

(79,102 posts)
Sun Dec 14, 2025, 10:08 AM Yesterday

Mike Johnson's speakership is in trouble


Mike Johnson’s speakership is in trouble
Like his GOP predecessors, the House speaker is having trouble corralling his unpredictable caucus

By Heather Digby Parton
Columnist
Published December 14, 2025 9:00AM (EST)


(Salon) President Donald Trump declared last week that House Speaker Mike Johnson “has been a fantastic speaker,” making it clear that he considers Johnson to be one of his most important subordinates. Trump wasn’t doing Johnson any favors. With his latest approval ratings firmly in the thirties, the president is increasingly seen as more of an albatross than a benefit to the GOP. And right now, with House Republicans on the verge of a full-scale mutiny, Johnson needs all the help he can get.

In fairness, Johnson is not the first Republican speaker to find himself in that situation. In fact, it has become something of a ritual sacrifice for the leader of the House GOP to be unceremoniously deposed by his own members. Johnson himself won the post after his predecessor, former Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Ca., was removed from his post after a painful series of votes in which the caucus finally settled on the virtually unknown congressman from Louisiana to lead them.

....(snip)....

Republicans govern in total chaos. But Johnson’s case is unique in one important respect: In the past few years, the reason GOP speakers failed was because the most extreme conservatives in the caucus would not accept any kind of compromise with Democrats in order to pass legislation. And even when the “compromise” was really a win, they refused to take yes for an answer. They wanted to dominate the opposition, to pound them into submission, and if they couldn’t have that they would rather have nothing. Boehner, Ryan and McCarthy all fell prey to that puerile intransigence. Johnson was one of those guys himself and, for the most part, he’s been able to keep his hardcore tea party types in line. His resistance is coming from a number of other directions.

....(snip)....

Members are still angry about Johnson’s decision to send them home for two months during the shutdown, and those in vulnerable swing districts are desperate to extend subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, knowing that allowing them to lapse will be the kiss of death. Johnson, following his own deep hostility to any kind of government health care program, is refusing. Even Trump was briefly willing to extend them for a couple of years, but the speaker and others quickly informed him that plan was a non-starter with the right wing, which is excited by the idea that people on the hated Obamacare will lose their insurance. ............(more)

https://www.salon.com/2025/12/14/mike-johnsons-speakership-is-in-trouble/




7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Mike Johnson's speakership is in trouble (Original Post) marmar Yesterday OP
Trump "considers Johnson to be one of his most important subordinates"? sop Yesterday #1
The Speaker of the House isn't supposed to work for, or take orders from the President. Mariana Yesterday #2
DURec leftstreet Yesterday #3
Mikely Loves Trump! usonian Yesterday #4
K&R UTUSN Yesterday #5
Worst speaker ever! Initech 20 hrs ago #6
Maybe he could step aside and let Aaron be the Speaker. RedWhiteBlueIsRacist 19 hrs ago #7

sop

(17,204 posts)
1. Trump "considers Johnson to be one of his most important subordinates"?
Sun Dec 14, 2025, 10:21 AM
Yesterday

The Speaker of the House doesn't work for, or take orders from the President. Johnson is the leader of the Legislative Branch with distinct constitutional roles. The Speaker was elected by his House peers, he represents Congress, not the Executive Branch.

Mariana

(15,611 posts)
2. The Speaker of the House isn't supposed to work for, or take orders from the President.
Sun Dec 14, 2025, 11:20 AM
Yesterday

But if a Speaker chooses to work for, or take orders from the President, who is to stop him? Only his colleagues in the House can do that, especially since his constituents don't seem to be inclined to remove him from his seat.

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