If the list of concessions that has been floating around is real, they more or less have his balls in a vice grip and can squeeze them at will.
Everyone is talking about the return to the Jeffersonian rule on Speakers where it only takes one member to call for a vote of confidence in the speaker. But some of the other rumored concessions (at least showing up in the MSM, so probably with some reasonable inside scoops) are as follows:
MacCarthy-aligned PAC's stay out of primary races.
Debt ceiling hikes must be paired with spending cuts.
Appropriations bills moved individually instead of Omnibus.
Freedom Caucus members given seats on various committees. Apparently, there will also be 3 FC members on the Rules Committee, which gives them veto authority over a significant chunk of House matters.
Discretionary spending capped at 2022 levels.
72-hours required to review bills before they are allowed a floor vote.
Make it easier for members to offer amendments to bills.
Creation of a "Church"-style committee to investigate corruption and weaponization of US agencies, especially, but not limited to, the FBI.
Restoration of the "Holman Rule", which allows for the defunding, firing, and even outright elimination of bureaucratic positions and departments without having to follow traditional appropriations rules.
If that is true, then the Populist have a huge amount of power because they grabbed MacCarthy by the balls and decided to ride the tiger instead of backing down. But hey, he seems happy since he has his precious little gavel. Which I suppose is the one good thing we have over MacCarthy compared to the likes of McConnell. MacCarthy is just a stooge who will ride with whoever will give him the power he wants. And if that means giving some significant concessions to the FC so he can think he has power, then so be it. And if he starts having second doubts because he has his buttboy Frank Luntz whispering in his ear, just squeeze his balls until he says uncle.
I'll take a Useful Idiot to take back the country. 1 is a big help for Trump, but they have 2 years to re-organize. 3 should help cut down on the funding to Leftist embezzlement schemes. 4 is a big win to keep pressure on specific issues. 8 will be a major political victory in taking on the IC & FBI. But 9? Nine is where the real money is at if we can use it. Just like with "Schedule F", we need to cut 45,000 federal employees at a minimum. Getting started on that sooner rather than later can really help. If all goes well, we might be able to use that to impeach and remove Fauci from the NIH.
That being said, holy shit, if they put Chip Roy on the Rules committee, I consider that an outstanding win for America at large. After that CNN segment, I'd almost rather have him as the speaker more than Jim Jordan. Dude was such a clear and obvious, non-partisan, reformer that CNN didn't even know what to say or do about it. Byron Donalds seems like a good guy too, even if neither are obvious, aggressive, populists.
On a side note, it definitely keeps the populist movement from also letting Trump make a stupid mistake. OneTruePhilosoraptor is out there somewhere, and despite our disagreements, there's no denial that Trump is shit at picking allies. If Trump takes his eye off the ball, the populists can keep McCarthy from stabbing him in the back. Part of me genuinely hopes that this was part of that larger strategy, but I actually doubt it, because it sounds like Trump already thought he had McCarthy in the bag, which I'd say would have been a very dangerous assumption.
If the list of concessions that has been floating around is real, they more or less have his balls in a vice grip and can squeeze them at will.
Everyone is talking about the return to the Jeffersonian rule on Speakers where it only takes one member to call for a vote of confidence in the speaker. But some of the other rumored concessions (at least showing up in the MSM, so probably with some reasonable inside scoops) are as follows:
If that is true, then the Populist have a huge amount of power because they grabbed MacCarthy by the balls and decided to ride the tiger instead of backing down. But hey, he seems happy since he has his precious little gavel. Which I suppose is the one good thing we have over MacCarthy compared to the likes of McConnell. MacCarthy is just a stooge who will ride with whoever will give him the power he wants. And if that means giving some significant concessions to the FC so he can think he has power, then so be it. And if he starts having second doubts because he has his buttboy Frank Luntz whispering in his ear, just squeeze his balls until he says uncle.
I'll take a Useful Idiot to take back the country. 1 is a big help for Trump, but they have 2 years to re-organize. 3 should help cut down on the funding to Leftist embezzlement schemes. 4 is a big win to keep pressure on specific issues. 8 will be a major political victory in taking on the IC & FBI. But 9? Nine is where the real money is at if we can use it. Just like with "Schedule F", we need to cut 45,000 federal employees at a minimum. Getting started on that sooner rather than later can really help. If all goes well, we might be able to use that to impeach and remove Fauci from the NIH.
That being said, holy shit, if they put Chip Roy on the Rules committee, I consider that an outstanding win for America at large. After that CNN segment, I'd almost rather have him as the speaker more than Jim Jordan. Dude was such a clear and obvious, non-partisan, reformer that CNN didn't even know what to say or do about it. Byron Donalds seems like a good guy too, even if neither are obvious, aggressive, populists.
On a side note, it definitely keeps the populist movement from also letting Trump make a stupid mistake. OneTruePhilosoraptor is out there somewhere, and despite our disagreements, there's no denial that Trump is shit at picking allies. If Trump takes his eye off the ball, the populists can keep McCarthy from stabbing him in the back. Part of me genuinely hopes that this was part of that larger strategy, but I actually doubt it, because it sounds like Trump already thought he had McCarthy in the bag, which I'd say would have been a very dangerous assumption.