The Speaker’s Race
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The democrats are happy to stand back and watch as the GOP yet again shows it is incapable of governing, at least episodically.
If Johnson wants to bypass his magat fringe, he can make a deal with them but it ain’t coming for free.
No doubt the GOP would do the same if the roles were reversed.
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@jon-nyc said in The Speaker’s Race:
The democrats are happy to stand back and watch as the GOP yet again shows it is incapable of governing, at least episodically.
If Johnson wants to bypass his magat fringe, he can make a deal with them but it ain’t coming for free.
No doubt the GOP would do the same if the roles were reversed.
Yup.
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@George-K said in The Speaker’s Race:
Time for President-Elect Trump to jawbone.
You would think, if it’s only one or two, he could bring hell down on them by visiting the district with Elon and crew and talking about how they’re blocking
what 49.9% of the country voted forthe entire MAGA program, and thus doing Kamala’s bidding. -
@jon-nyc said in The Speaker’s Race:
@Jolly said in The Speaker’s Race:
He's right, isn't he?
There are 12 sentences in the tweet. Let me count the untruths.
- 2
- 2
- Sure, by his campaign team
- Unclear and don’t feel like looking into it
- 1
- 1
- 0
- No statements of fact to be evaluated
- Opinion
- 0
- Prediction can’t be evaluated for truth (though it’s unlikely)
- True
- No statement of fact to be evaluated
Maybe, but I still thought his statement was good enough. 🥱. Trump can be overt in his lies, Biden can be covert.
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So did I.
So did Amy Carter. Of all the presidents, only she and TR’s kids went to public school in Washington while their dads were in office.
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https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/house-speaker-vote-johnson-2025
Mike Johnson was re-elected House speaker on the first ballot after some late drama, with President-elect Donald Trump forced to step in. Two Republicans changed their votes after initially opposing the incumbent.
Three House Republicans—Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Ralph Norman of South Carolina, and Keith Self of Texas—had initially denied Johnson a majority by voting for someone else. But Norman and Self switched their votes, giving the win to Johnson.
Trump spoke by phone with Norman and Self after the initial voting--telling them to stop the nonsense and back Johnson, according to people familiar with the discussions. Johnson didn’t agree to any specific concessions, a Republican lawmaker said.
Several hard-right House Republicans said in a letter they only voted for Johnson to make sure the chamber was ready to certify Trump as president in the coming days: “We did this despite our sincere reservations regarding the Speaker’s track record.”
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I think it might be a wee bit difficult for Johnson to buck Trump…
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@LuFins-Dad said in The Speaker’s Race:
I think it might be a wee bit difficult for Johnson to buck Trump…
Johnson’s not really the problem. It’ll be the one or two outliers.
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@Mik said in The Speaker’s Race:
Like I said, Trump learned a lot in his first term and since.
I don’t know. They haven’t really displayed that yet. Trump and his buddies still talk regularly about grand changes that would require bipartisan majorities but the tactical approach seems to be corral the GOP and go it alone. That will get you a budget-like thing (CR, whatever) and even a tax cut but nothing else.
I don’t think Thune is planning a complete overhaul of Senate rules.
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It's certainly hard to imagine Donald Trump bullshitting extravagantly.
And what was there to learn? His first Presidency was the greatest in the history of the country. His words, not mine, so it must be true.