The move is Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greeneâs top demand for the speaker to end her ouster threat.
House Republicans are âlooking very intentlyâ at defunding the office of special counsel Jack Smith, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said on May 7.
At a House Republican leadership press conference, the speaker was asked whether that option was being considered given his opposition to Mr. Smithâs prosecution of former President Donald Trump.
âI think there are serious questions on the part of the American people, and they want to knowâtheyâre asking usâwhat we can do to ensure that the law is followed. And weâre looking at every possible angle on that instinct,â Mr. Johnson said.
The speaker decried Mr. Smithâs cases against the former president as an example of the Biden administrationâs âweaponizationâ of the justice system against its political opponentsâan allegation the administration and Democrats dispute.
The speaker charged that the special counsel had engaged in evidence tampering, though prosecutors have downplayed the reorganization, positing that the items may have shifted in transit.
âThese cases are a coordinated political attack, plain and simple,â Mr. Johnson said, echoing the former presidentâs stance on the matter.
âThey are a clear attempt to keep Donald Trump in the courtroom and off the campaign trailâthatâs what this is.
âItâs election interference, it is borderline criminal conspiracy, and the American people see right through it.â
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) is leading the charge to defund Mr. Smith on Capitol Hill.
As a vocal supporter of President Trump, she has introduced legislation to that effect in the past, though it never advanced.
Now, she is renewing that call, pressing the speaker to act or be forced out.
âWe are fed up with the weaponized government, the weaponized Department of Justice that is being used as Joe Bidenâs campaign arm,â she said on May 7 on Steve Bannonâs âWar Roomâ podcast.
Recalling special counsel Robert Muellerâs Russian collusion probe, she said she wanted the Justice Departmentâs âpolitical prosecutionsâ of President Trump to stop.
âI want the entire special counsel defunding [sic], and I want it to end. And I think our Republican speaker can make that happen.â
Embattled Speaker
Ms. Greene identified defunding the special counsel as her top demand for Mr. Johnson if he wishes to keep his seat.
The speaker has faced increasing dissatisfaction from members of his own conference as he navigates a historically small House majority.
Ms. Greene, unhappy with his recent legislative moves, filed a motion to strip him of the gavel in March. She hasnât called for a vote on the matter yet, though she promised on May 1 to do so this week.
âI think every member of Congress needs to take that vote and let the chips fall where they may,â she said last week.
While Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) have backed Mr. Johnsonâs removal, other Republicans have distanced themselves from the ideaâincluding President Trump.
âLook, we have a majority of one, OK? So, itâs not like he can go and do whatever he wants to do,â President Trump said on April 22.
Itâs not often that Ms. Greene finds herself at odds with President Trump, and that fact could be the reason she has yet to act on her warnings.
May 7 marked the second consecutive day the congresswoman met with Mr. Johnson to discuss their differences. She didnât address reporters after.
Asked why he was ânegotiatingâ with Ms. Greene during his press conference, the speaker stressed: âItâs not a negotiation, OK? This is how Iâve operated as speaker.â
He noted that he has âlengthyâ discussions with other members of the GOP conference on a daily basis.
âWhen you can only lose one vote on a party preference or priority, it takes a lot of time to build consensus,â he said.
Ms. Greeneâs other demands for Mr. Johnson include only bringing bills to the floor that a majority of Republicans support, no more funding for Ukraine, and passing 12 separate appropriations bills rather than massive minibus or omnibus bills.
âWe arenât going to have an omnibus that Chuck Schumer wrote rammed down our throat. We are not going to do that again,â Ms. Greene told Mr. Bannon.
Adding that such a move would ânot be toleratedâ going forward.
âIf we donât get our 12 separate appropriation bills, weâll have to do a 1 percent cut to spending, or we wonât do anything at all.â
Even if Ms. Greene does decide to oust Mr. Johnson, the move is poised to fail as House Democrat leaders have pledged to table the motion.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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