An effort by Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) to cease Rep. Anna Paulina Luna’s (R-Fla.) push for permitting proxy voting for brand spanking new mother and father is on skinny ice as numerous Republicans warn they could vote in opposition to management’s hardball tactic.
Such a transfer on the arcane procedural matter would quantity to a serious rebel in opposition to GOP leaders, weaken their management over the Home flooring and alter how the chamber capabilities.
Luna efficiently spearheaded a discharge petition that enables her to drive a vote on Rep. Brittany Pettersen (D-Colo.) decision to greenlight proxy voting for brand spanking new mother and father, getting the required 218 signatures — together with from 11 different Republicans. Meaning if the decision was to return to the ground as-is, it could very seemingly go.
However the Home Guidelines Committee superior a rule Tuesday morning that features language that might basically “turn off” privilege, blocking Luna or her allies from forcing motion on the proxy voting laws. The identical rule would advance payments associated to judicial rulings and proof of citizenship for voting, that means anybody voting to permit the proxy voting laws to return to the ground would even be blocking GOP priorities.
Among the dozen Republicans who signed the discharge petition — and others — are threatening to vote “no” anyway when the rule hits the ground at 1:30 p.m. EDT.
Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) mentioned he’ll “probably” vote in opposition to the rule Tuesday afternoon, whereas Reps. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) and Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.) mentioned they’re contemplating it. Rep. Michael Rulli (R-Ohio) mentioned “I’m going to take all options on the table” when requested how he’ll vote on the rule, and Reps. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) and Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) advised The Hill they’re undecided.
Burchett, Crenshaw, Rulli and Lawler all signed Luna’s discharge petition.
Republicans can solely afford to lose two of their members on the procedural vote, assuming all Democrats are in opposition and there’s full attendance. With these tight margins, the result is poised to be a photograph end.
“That’s going to be very close,” Burchett mentioned when requested if the rule would fail.
Management, for its half, is assured it’ll have the votes to undertake the rule and bury the proxy voting discharge petition.
“I’m not concerned about it,” Johnson mentioned when requested by The Hill if he’s apprehensive concerning the rule potential failing. “It’s a difficult situation, but I think we’re doing the right thing here.”
If the GOP lawmakers efficiently torpedo the procedural vote, it could block consideration of two unrelated GOP priorities: the No Rogue Rulings Act, which might restrict the ability of federal judges to impose nationwide injunctions like people who have blocked Trump administration actions, and the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which might require proof of citizenship in an effort to register to vote.
Democrats say they’ve robust sufficient attendance Tuesday to actually squeeze the Home GOP on the vote.
“It’s hanging in the balance because we actually have a very good attendance today, and if every Democrat votes it would only take a couple of Republicans to join us to kill this,” Rep. Judy Chu (D-Calif.) said. “All I know is Luna’s working really hard on her fellow Republicans.”
The pushback just isn’t restricted to those that assist the underlying decision.
LaLota mentioned he’s nonetheless deciding how he feels about proxy voting for brand spanking new mother and father, however mentioned he’ll most likely vote in opposition to the rule in protest of the management tactic.
“She should be able to have her time, her day in court, and you shouldn’t use the Rules Committee or the rules process to quash” the discharge petition, LaLota mentioned.
Crenshaw railed in opposition to management for the tactic of including language to the rule, calling it “a bad idea” as a result of “it’s adding extra divisiveness on this divisive topic.” He additionally criticized Johnson’s argument in opposition to proxy voting; the Speaker has mentioned the observe is unconstitutional, whereas warning that the parental proxy voting decision could be a slippery slope of increasing the observe.
“His arguments aren’t very good,” Crenshaw mentioned. “I think the apocalyptic predictions that the other side makes — the other side being the one who don’t want proxy voting — makes about this issue are just not based in reality, it’s a slippery slope fallacy argument. Like, ‘If you do this now it’ll obviously end up with everything doing this all the time.’ Of course it won’t.”
Tuesday afternoon’s vote would be the fruits of a weeks-long push by Luna to drive a vote on permitting proxy voting for brand spanking new mother and father, and Johnson’s effort to cease that campaign in its tracks.
GOP leaders at first tried to get the Republicans who signed the petition to alter their minds — and did get Reps. Wealthy McCormick (R-Ga.) and Dan Meuser (R-Pa.), who signed the discharge petition, to again off their assist. Each of them confirmed they are going to vote for the rule.
However hard-line members of the Home Freedom Caucus — Luna’s one-time allies — pushed for Johnson to take a extra aggressive stance in making an attempt to cease a vote on the push.
That infuriated Luna, who introduced her departure from the Freedom Caucus on Monday, writing: “I cannot remain part of a caucus where a select few operate outside its guidelines, misuse its name, broker backroom deals that undermine its core values and where the lines of compromise and transaction are blurred, disparage me to the press, and encourage misrepresentation of me to the American people.”
Johnson mentioned he met with Luna in his workplace at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday.
And the Speaker dismissed concern concerning the precedent of killing a discharge petition.
“We used a rule to change a rule on something that would change the rules of the House itself,” Johnson mentioned. “So this is all within the system. It’s all within the process.”