âThis bill is an abomination,â Texas Rep. Chip Roy said.
Conservative Republicans didnât hold back on March 21 over the $1.2 trillion spending bill that would fund 70 percent of the governmentâas the clock ticked toward a partial government shutdown on March 23.
The bill, the text of which was unveiled in the early morning hours of March 21âless than 48 hours before a shutdown was set to beginâimmediately reignited tensions in the Republican conference and concerns about House Speaker Mike Johnsonâs (R-La.) leadership of the lower chamber.
âThey did make some cuts, but itâs not what I would like,â Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) told reporters in a gentle voice.
But Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) vented about the bill, which would fund agencies such as the Defense Department, and directed his ire at Mr. Johnson, saying he âblew it.â
âItâs total lack of backbone, total lack of leadership, and a total failure by Republican leadership, thereâs no other way to describe it,â Mr. Roy said on âBannonâs War Room.â
âThis bill is an abomination.â
Mr. Roy called on the American people to flood the phones of the offices of GOP members of Congress to âtell them the truth that they are risking the House majority if they vote for this bill.â
He and other conservative Republicans have made numerous posts on X railing against the bill.
Head-Turning Earmarks
Several Republicans criticized the bill for some head-turning earmarks it would fund.
Republicans also blasted the inclusion of funding in the bill for a new FBI headquarters in Greenbelt, Maryland, which the GOP has targeted amid growing frustration with the agency for alleged politicization.
âWe canât fix weaponized government if weâre funding it.â
Others cited the legislationâs border and immigration funding.
Mr. Aderholt also condemned the billâs funding for facilities that provide âroutine abortion services, including late-term abortions.â
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) emphasized the billâs funding allocations for a series of left-wing initiatives as driving her opposition.
Procedural Concerns
Several Republicans also expressed procedural concerns about the speed at which the bill is moving.
Under an internal conference rule, the leadership is supposed to provide members with 72 hours to read legislation before bringing it to the floor for a vote.
In the hope of preventing a shutdown and quitting town by the start of the Easter recess, however, the bill is expected to be voted on on March 22âroughly 36 hours after its introduction.
âThis 1,000-plus page spending bill was presented to members less than 36 hours before the vote, breaking the House Rule that requires members to have 72 hours to review major legislation,â the caucus said.
âThis is not what Republicans promised America.â
Mr. Scott agreed. When asked whether the 72-hour rule should have stayed in place, Mr. Scott told The Epoch Times, âAbsolutely.â
âGive people time to read the thing,â he said. âYou should know … whatâs in the bill before you vote on it.â
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), told reporters, âThe dysfunction of the appropriations process is disgusting.â
The fever pitch of conservative backlash to the bill has again raised concerns about a motion to remove Mr. Johnson from the speakership.
Mr. Burchett told reporters he didnât see this as likely, saying that if Republicans were to remove another speaker, âthey might as well hand the gavel over to [House Minority Leader] Hakeem [Jeffries].â
Despite conservative frustrations with the bill, it currently seems on track to glide through the lower chamber under a suspension of the rules with vast Democrat support.
Itâs also likely to pass the Senate, although progress on it could be held up by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who threatened to obstruct the bill.
âWe’ll see,â Mr. Paul told reporters when asked if he would seek to block the bill.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!