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A week after House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy gambled he could unify his caucus by ousting a prominent critic of former President Donald Trump, a new Trump-inspired rift has raised questions about his leadership.
Thirty-five Republican representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives – or one out of every six – joined the 219 majority Democrats in voting to create a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot, when hundreds of Trump supporters stormed the building, fighting with police and leaving five people dead.
That was more than three times as many Republicans as voted in January to hold Trump’s second impeachment trial, on a charge of inciting insurrection.
The vote followed a series of gyrations in which McCarthy gave Representative John Katko the go-ahead to negotiate the bipartisan deal, then rejected it after it became public and tried to persuade his fellow Republicans to vote against it.
The vote would appear to weaken McCarthy, a California lawmaker who hopes to become speaker of the 435-member House if his party can assemble a majority with just five more seats in the November 2022 congressional election.
Loyal to Trump, McCarthy, 56, with 14 years in Washington, last week led his party in ousting Representative Liz Cheney from a House leadership role for denouncing Trump’s false claim his election defeat was the result of fraud.
“Representative McCarthy may have put his own ambition above loyalty to our Constitution,” said party strategist Kevin Kellems. “It eventually will harm him and his followers.”
McCarthy himself denied any loss to his leadership. When asked where the Cheney ouster and commission vote left him, he said: “Just stronger.”
He told reporters that he had expected a larger number of Republicans to break ranks.
Several Republicans who spoke on condition of anonymity said they had not expected a commission deal that would reach the House floor.
Some lamented that the deal between Katko and Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, a Democrat, had not been put to a party conference vote before a final agreement.
“It would have been good for us to have voted on it,” Representative Thomas Massie, a staunch conservative, said without mentioning McCarthy.
Republican hopes of blocking the bipartisan commission now rest with McCarthy’s Senate counterpart, Mitch McConnell, who has also come out against it. McConnell has the easier job, as that 100-member chamber’s rules require 60 votes to advance most legislation, meaning 10 Senate Republicans would have to break with their party to pass it
Republicans worry the commission would keep public attention on the violence that played out in the Capitol after a fiery speech by Trump filled with falsehoods, and could reveal new details about Trump’s handling of the response that might sour voters on Republicans.