There was something ghoulish about the rally that House Republicans held today in the Rayburn Room after they voted to defund health care reform. The party atmosphere was so boisterous, the cheers and laughter so loud, that it was easy to forget everyone in the room had just voted to keep tens of millions of people from getting health insurance.
By keeping spending at its current levels through mid-December, they had also voted to continue the sequester, which is preventing millions of people from getting public housing subsidies, Head Start seats, and unemployment benefits. The sequester is also taking a serious toll on scientific research and investment in infrastructure, not to mention its infuriating drag on employment and the economic recovery. How about another round of applause?
This shouldnt come as a surprise, of course, from a House that had voted the previous day to cut food stamps for 3.8 million low-income people, including many very young and very old recipients. But at least they didnt have a party to celebrate that vote.
Today, though, everyone was in a great mood.
When we acted, it wasnt just a group of Republicans, but it was a bipartisan vote, said Kevin McCarthy, the Majority Whip. (O.K., fine. Two Democrats voted for it, and 188 voted against.) Let me state that again because I want to make sure you write it correctly. [Huge laughter.] It was a bipartisan vote because were Americans first! [Cheers, applause.]
I was in McCarthy's office this summer talking to his aids. He has a big picture of Lincoln on one wall and on the opposite wall an even bigger picture of Reagan.
His aide said a favorite of the Majority Whip is the third pic that shows President Obama after a defeat of some piece of legislation. You can see Obama is not happy. I took that one, not very good.


