The three reasons that House Republicans are so ineffective

the three reasons that house republicans are so ineffective

The three reasons that House Republicans are so ineffective

What House Republicans had hoped to do on Tuesday evening was to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, sending a message to the Biden administration (and general election voters) about how seriously they took the border. The caucus had been building to this for months, with multiple hearings and countless media interviews centered on Mayorkas and his purported mishandling of his position.

Then it was time for the House to consider the articles of impeachment — and Republicans didn’t have the votes. A handful of defections from within the party and bad counting on the part of Republican leaders left the caucus scrambling; Rep. Blake D. Moore (R-Utah) had to flip his vote so that his party would be able to bring the impeachment effort to another vote in the future.

It was a debacle. And it was entirely in keeping with the House Republican majority since January 2023.

Sign up for How To Read This Chart, a weekly data newsletter from Philip Bump

There are several reasons that the Republican caucus has proved unusually incapable of getting things done. But before we evaluate those reasons, let’s validate that assertion of incapability. Data from GovTrack indicates that the 118th Congress has enacted about 7 percent of the legislation that congresses have enacted on average since the 93rd, back in 1973 and 1974.

the three reasons that house republicans are so ineffective

In fairness, this Congress is not yet over. The House and the Senate have another 10 months or so to pass legislation. But even if Congress enacts twice as much legislation over the rest of the session as it has since January 2023, the 118th Congress will still end with only a third of the number of laws enacted during the 117th.

So why is this happening? Setting aside that the Senate is controlled by Democrats — lowering the likelihood that both chambers will pass agreed-upon legislation — there are three central challenges.

The first is that the Republican caucus has that slim majority. There are seven more Republicans than Democrats, meaning that Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) can only lose three votes without losing his majority. On Mayorkas, he lost those three votes — and he was missing House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.).

But that overlaps with the second reason: Republican legislators are more likely to defect from the party majority.

To measure this, I took data on every roll-call vote (that is, a vote in which legislators recorded their choice) since the 108th Congress. On each vote, a plurality of each party’s caucus supported one position and, usually, some members disagreed. We can generate a percentage as follows: If there are 10 Republicans and nine vote for the caucus’s majority position, that means a 90 percent agreement within the party.

Looking at that data, you can see that the average support from the Republican caucus for the majority position has been less than 90 percent since the 116th Congress in 2019 and 2020. (This is indicated by the black lines on the chart below.) Among the Democrats, there’s much more consensus: On average, the party’s caucus has had 96 percent of its votes cast with the majority position over that same period.

the three reasons that house republicans are so ineffective

You can also see how often the Republican caucus has seen even larger defections from the majority with the gray-shaded sections. In the 118th Congress, nearly 9 in 10 roll-call votes for the Democrats have had at least 90 percent of the caucus on board. For the Republicans, only a bit over half have had that level of unity.

The outlier here is actually the Democrats, not the Republicans. Party caucuses averaged 89 percent agreement in votes from the 108th to 115th caucuses — not much higher than where the Republicans are now. But the Democrats’ unanimity makes it more important for Republicans to be similarly unified, which they aren’t.

This is partly because there are at least two distinct segments of the Republican caucus, one on the far-right and one on the near-right. This has been most apparent in the caucus’s multiple efforts to elect a speaker; the more-extreme segment was more likely to oppose the candidacy of Kevin McCarthy in January 2023 and the less-extreme part more likely to oppose the candidacy of Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) last fall.

the three reasons that house republicans are so ineffective

This brings us to the third reason that House Republicans are having so much trouble: They’re under pressure, especially from the far right, to take more difficult votes.

The Mayorkas impeachment is a good example. It’s an extreme response to immigration issues that built up a head of steam in the right-wing media, a world to which the caucus’s right-most fringe is particularly sensitive. So the articles of impeachment came forward — and less-extreme legislators skeptical of the idea balked.

None of these factors means that the caucus can’t get anything done. After all, they came within Scalise’s vote of impeaching Mayorkas. They still may.

But it does explain why, so far, they haven’t been able to do much.

News Related

OTHER NEWS

Lawsuit seeks $16 million against Maryland county over death of pet dog shot by police

A department investigator accused two of the officers of “conduct unbecoming an officer” for entering the apartment without a warrant, but the third officer was cleared of wrongdoing, the suit says. Read more »

Heidi Klum shares rare photo of all 4 of her and Seal's kids

Heidi Klum posted a rare picture with husband Tom Kaulitz and her four kids: Leni, 19, Henry, 18, Johan, 17, and Lou, 14, having some quality family time. Read more »

European stocks head for flat open as markets struggle to find momentum

This is CNBC’s live blog covering European markets. European markets are heading for a flat open Tuesday, continuing lackluster sentiment seen at the start of the week in the region ... Read more »

Linda C. Black Horoscopes: November 28

Nancy Black Today’s Birthday (11/28/23). This year energizes your work and health. Faithful domestic routines provide central support. Shift directions to balance your work and health, before adapting around team ... Read more »

Michigan Democrats poised to test ambitious environmental goals in the industrial Midwest

FILE – One of more than 4,000 solar panels constructed by DTE Energy lines a 9.37-acre swath of land in Ann Arbor Township, Mich., Sept. 15, 2015. Michigan will join ... Read more »

Gaza Is Falling Into ‘Absolute Chaos,’ Aid Groups Say

A shaky cease-fire between Israel and Hamas has allowed a surge of aid to reach Palestinians in Gaza, but humanitarian groups and civilians in the enclave say the convoys aren’t ... Read more »

Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families to march together in anti-hate vigil

Demonstrators march against the rise of antisemitism in the UK on Sunday – SUSANNAH IRELAND/REUTERS Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families will march together as part of an anti-hate vigil on ... Read more »
Top List in the World