USA Kevin McCarthy succeeds Nancy Pelosi as Speaker of the

United States: House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy fired for the first time

Republican Representative Kevin McCarthy was removed from his position as Speaker on Tuesday, October 3, following an impeachment vote against him.

This is a first in the history of the American Congress: the Republican leader of the House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy, was ousted from his post on Tuesday, the victim of fratricidal disputes within his party.

After a tense debate between conservatives in the chamber, 216 elected officials, including eight Republicans, voted to 210 in favor of firing him.

Immediately after this unprecedented result, a smiling Kevin McCarthy was surrounded by members of his party who hugged him and shook his hand.

McCarthy is accused of cutting a deal with Biden

The vote ushers in a period of intense turmoil in the House of Commons as a replacement needs to be elected, which promises to be very complicated. This came after an elected official from the far right in the US, Matt Gaetz, filed a motion to fire the “Speaker” even though he was a member of his party.

This elected official from Florida particularly criticizes Kevin McCarthy for negotiating a preliminary budget with elected Democrats to finance the federal government, which many conservatives rejected. He also accuses the Republican tenor of having made a “secret agreement” with President Joe Biden about a possible envelope for Ukraine.

However, the right wing of the Republican Party strongly opposes releasing additional funds to Kyiv and believes that these funds should instead be used to combat the migration crisis at the US-Mexico border.

And it doesn’t matter that the overwhelming majority of Kevin McCarthy’s caucus publicly supported it: the Trumpists had a de facto veto in the House of Representatives, since that institution had a very thin Republican majority.

“We are on the edge of the abyss”

For a while, Kevin McCarthy seemed to think he was saving his own head, hoping that the political calculations would prevail and that he could force Democratic support, even very fair ones, in exchange for concessions. Wasted effort.

“It is up to the Republican Party to end the Republican civil war in the House,” Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a letter after a lengthy meeting Tuesday with his caucus.

“There are countless reasons to let Republicans deal with their own problems. Let them wallow in the quagmire of their incompetence and inability to govern,” progressive elected official Pramila Jayapal said adamantly.

In a sign that the disagreements are tearing Republicans apart, conservative elected officials took turns on the chamber to argue for and against Kevin McCarthy.

“We are on the edge of the abyss. We only have a few minutes left to come to our senses and recognize the serious danger,” said Republican-elect Tom McClintock before the vote.

“Chaos is President McCarthy.”

If the impeachment motion passes, “the House will be paralyzed,” “Democrats will revel in Republican dysfunction, and the people will be rightly outraged,” he said.

His colleague Tom Cole warned of the “chaos” the House and Republicans would be plunged into if Kevin McCarthy were impeached.

“The chaos is on President McCarthy,” Matt Gaetz replied. “Chaos is someone you can’t trust.”

These internal conflicts, exposed in broad daylight, prompted a response from former Republican President Donald Trump. “Why do Republicans spend their time arguing among themselves, why aren’t they fighting the radical left-wing Democrats who are destroying our country?” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

First eviction of a “speaker”

Such a vote has not taken place in the United States in more than a century, and no speaker has ever been removed from office.

Could Kevin McCarthy, 58, try to return to his job? The hypothesis is not far-fetched because he has the right to run again. At your own risk: He was already forcibly elected in January due to the very narrow Republican majority.

To reach the top, he had to make huge concessions to some twenty Trumpists, including the possibility that any elected official would have the power to call a vote to remove him. A promise that haunted him again on Tuesday.

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