In Leaked Video, GOP Congressman admits what we all already know - there is no intent of working across the aisle. It's all posturing."
JAKE JOHNSON,
STAFF WRITER for Common Dreams
Newly leaked video footage of a recent event hosted by the right-wing group Patriot Voices shows Republican Rep. Chip Roy of Texas openly admitting that his party wants "18 more months of chaos and the inability to get stuff done" as President Joe Biden, a bipartisan group of senators, and congressional Democrats work to pass climate and infrastructure legislation.
"Honestly,
right now, for the next 18 months, our job is to do everything we can to slow
all of that down to get to December of 2022," Roy says in the clip,
referring to the month after that year's midterm elections. Republicans need to
flip just a handful of seats to take back the
House and Senate.
"I don't
vote for anything in the House of Representatives right now," Roy says in
response to an audience member's question about the sweeping infrastructure and
safety-net package that Democrats are
planning to pass unilaterally alongside a White House-backed bipartisan deal.
In the video
that emerged Tuesday, the Texas Republican dismisses the Democratic
reconciliation package—which progressives hope will include at least $6 trillion in spending
on climate programs, Medicare expansion, and other priorities left out of the
bipartisan plan—as "liberal garbage."
Watch the video,
which was posted by Lauren Windsor of The Undercurrent:
Roy's articulation of the Republican Party's strategic thinking is hardly a
diversion from what the GOP leadership has said publicly, but it was viewed as
further evidence that the bulk of the minority party is not interested in
good-faith legislative talks with the Democratic majority.
"Chip Roy
says what we all already know: there is no intent of working across the aisle.
It's all posturing for bullshit and chaos," tweeted advocacy group
Indivisible Houston.
Ezra Levin,
co-director of Indivisible, noted that "Chip Roy got
caught saying it out loud, but to be clear this has been [Senate Minority
Leader] McConnell's plan all along."
As the clip of
Roy circulated online Tuesday, McConnell (R-Ky.) told a Kentucky audience that
Republicans intend to give Democrats a "hell of a fight" over their
plans to pass a multitrillion-dollar infrastructure bill using the budget
reconciliation process, which is exempt from the Senate's 60-vote legislative
filibuster—an archaic tool that McConnell has repeatedly used to obstruct
Democratic legislation.
The Senate
Budget Committee, headed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), is currently hashing out the
parameters of the reconciliation bill.
"The era of
bipartisanship on this stuff is over," McConnell said of the
reconciliation package. "There is a process by which they could pass this
without a single Republican. But we're going to make it hard for them. And
there are a few Democrats left in rural American and some others who would like
to be more in the political center who may find this offensive."
Rep. Pramila
Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, noted Monday that "not a
single Republican voted for the American Rescue Plan," a popular $1.9
trillion reconciliation package that
included direct relief payments, an extension of emergency unemployment
programs, and funding for vaccine distribution.
"We have no
reason to believe that Mitch '100% of my focus is on stopping this new
administration' McConnell will let them vote for an infrastructure deal,"
Jayapal added.