Mike Johnson escapes stalemate with stunning 13-minute reversal
With the help of President Trump, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) muscled a budget package through the House β a win he claimed will give him momentum to pass "Trump's full America First agenda β not just parts of it."
Why it matters: Johnson's dream of one big, beautiful bill will live another day. But so will the reality of his razor-thin House GOP majority.
- The extraordinary evening was an early taste of the chaos to come.
Zoom in: Just before 7:30pm ET, lawmakers began filing out of the House chamber after being told votes were done for the evening. Leadership thought they had too many holdouts to risk a vote.
Just 13 minutes later lawmakers were streaming back in β the vote was on.
- "I just got a call from my office, they said 'Come back, the vote is back on,'" exclaimed a befuddled Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.).
- Some lawmakers had already been long gone. Several told Axios they were at dinner. At least one was at a Capitol Hill bar. Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.) said he was "halfway home."
- "I was already in my pajamas," quipped Rep. Scott Fitzgerald (R-Wisc.). The whole dynamic was "very odd," said Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.).
Between the lines: Both parties pulled out all the stops to try and ensure their preferred outcome.
- Rep. Brittany Pettersen (D-Colo.) showed up despite giving birth less than a month ago. Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) voted despite being sick.
- Rep. Kevin Mullin (D-Calif.), who is recovering from a blood clot in his leg and a knee infection contracted from surgery, arrived to vote using a walker.
- Only Rep. RaΓΊl Grijalva (D-Calif.), 77, who has missed nearly every vote since Jan. 3 as he undergoes cancer treatment, was absent.
Zoom out: Remember, this procedural bill was the easy part.
- Passing the actual bill β which could include deep cuts to Medicaid β will require Republicans of all stripes to subordinate their personal goals for the overall ambitions of the party and their president.
- House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) is salivating at the opportunity to put Republicans on the record on their planned cuts, especially on social safety net programs.
What's next: Now Senate GOP Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has to decide whether he wants to accept, or try to amend, the House budget reconciliation package.
- Many of his members, including Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), want to make dramatic changes, including how Congress counts the cost of Trump's 2017 tax cuts.