Home » GOP conservatives warn Speaker Johnson: Don’t go through with budget vote

GOP conservatives warn Speaker Johnson: Don’t go through with budget vote

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Ultraconservative Rep. Andy Ogles has walked the plank for President Donald Trump on politically tough bills before, but, this time, Trump’s pressure campaign doesn’t appear to be working.

After speaking to a White House official on Tuesday night, the Tennessee Republican remained unswayed, and even personally warned Speaker Mike Johnson to not bring the party’s contentious budget measure to the floor.

“It’s going to fail,” Ogles recalled telling Johnson of the Senate-passed blueprint for Trump’s agenda.

Ogles is among more than a dozen Republicans who are defying Trump on his push for a Senate GOP budget measure that tees up huge tax cuts and trillions of spending to hike the debt limit — all while committing to pay for just $4 billion of it.

Republicans like Ogles are refusing to commit to that budget plan until their party leaders can guarantee a serious deficit reduction push, including from the Senate. While Trump and GOP leaders’ fierce whip operation has limited some of those defections – down from as many as 50 members earlier this week – Johnson still faces a huge vote problem with his own conference as he attempts to pass the Senate measure Wednesday night.

One potential off-ramp emerged Wednesday.

Rep. Ralph Norman, a holdout, suggested House Republicans are working with senators on “some cuts that the Senate would agree to” addressing the disparity in the House and Senate versions of the blueprint. The South Carolina Republican said those changes would not be made in the blueprint that Johnson brings to the floor, but rather would be a commitment to be incorporated in the future reconciliation bill.

Johnson’s next move is not clear, though GOP leadership sources suggested he may still force bringing the vote on the blueprint to the floor, daring Republicans to vote against the president.

Speaking to reporters earlier Wednesday, Johnson acknowledged that his fellow Republicans’ “concerns are real” but predicted that his team could convince the final holdouts.

“I think it is going to pass today,” Johnson said.

The tension within the GOP conference is largely aimed across the Capitol – at the Senate, which is far more squeamish on big spending cuts than the more conservative House.

“I trust the president, but I don’t trust the Senate. They’re a key part of this conversation,” Ogles said.

Trump is making perhaps the strongest pitch of his presidency so far to House Republicans to back the measure. He personally summoned a group of Republicans to the White House for meetings, while dozens of others have received calls from his senior advisers.

In meetings on the Hill in the last 48 hours, Trump’s deputy treasury secretary urged GOP lawmakers to back the measure, while separately, Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller pitched potential future spending cuts in a meeting with House Judiciary Republicans, according to people familiar with the discussions. Johnson himself sat down with the Freedom Caucus meeting on Monday night, which resulted in a tense discussion about the budget.

“We want everybody all in because it unlocks the opportunity to do the reconciliation package, which is where the rubber meets the road,” said Rep. Kevin Hern, who leads the House GOP policy committee.

But Rep. Rich McCormick, who said he is “undecided” on the budget plan, estimated that 15 more of his colleagues are firmly opposed right now.

“There is a trust factor that’s been kind of betrayed in recent history so we’re all a little bit wary of this negotiation process. Not that the president’s lying to us, but that the Senate will roll and somehow or another, the people who don’t want to cut spending significantly will find a way to continue the spending at the level it is,” McCormick said.

Just last month, the Georgia Republican had to be personally convinced to vote for the president’s bill to fund the government through September 30. He recalled sitting in meetings where they discussed ways to tackle federal spending — but then, as he now recalled, “we did none of it.”

“If you keep on pulling the football from when I’m kicking, eventually you’re going to get a little wary,” McCormick told CNN of his hesitation to get in line again.

That chorus of House conservatives who are demanding these big cuts as part of Trump’s domestic policy megabill, however, is so far failing to force the Senate’s hand.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune defended his chamber’s decision to commit to no more than $4 billion in his package, even as he acknowledges it has been a huge sticking point for conservatives.

“It’s kind of a feature of how we draft them to comply with the Byrd rule. A lot of it is just kind of speaking different languages but we understand where they are coming from and are trying to address that and just make sure everybody is comfortable with moving forward,” Thune said Wednesday.

CNN’s Haley Talbot and Veronica Stracqualursi contributed to this report.

Source: edition.cnn.com

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