Kevin McCarthy announces he will retire at the end of December

WASHINGTON: Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is resigning from Congress at the end of the month, he announced Wednesday, ending weeks of speculation about his future after he was ousted from his leadership role in October.

“I have decided to depart the House at the end of this year to serve America in new ways,” McCarthy wrote in an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. “I know my work is only getting started.”

McCarthy’s departure makes him the latest member to retire amid growing polarization that has made it difficult for Congress to operate. His decision comes a day after Rep. Patrick McHenry, who briefly served as temporary speaker following McCarthy’s ouster, also announced he would leave Congress.

Without McCarthy, the Republicans’ slim majority — already down to eight after Rep. George Santos was expelled from Congress — will shrink down to seven seats. A special election has been set for Santos’ seat for Feb. 13, with the district considered a toss up by the Cook Political Report.

McCarthy represents California’s 20th District in the central part of the state, stretching from the San Joaquin Valley and the southern tip of the Sierra Nevadas to the Mojave Desert. It’s a reliably red district that includes his hometown of Bakersfield.

McCarthy recently indicated that he’s been going through stages of grief since his ouster and did not want to make a rash decision about his future.

“If I decide to run again, I have to know in my heart I’m giving 110%. I have to know that I want to do that,” McCarthy said recently at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit. “I also have to know if I’m going to walk away, that I’m going to be fine with walking away.”

“If you just got thrown out of speaker, you’d go through different stages, would you not?” he added. “I want to know that it’s the right thing to do. And then if I’m walking away from something that I spent two decades at, I don’t want to look back and say I made an emotional decision.”
McCarthy’s tumultuous speakership

McCarthy, who was elected to Congress in 2006, held the top post for nine months before a deal he made to secure the speakership led to his downfall. His fight to win the gavel when Republicans took control of the House in January included 15 rounds of votes, and foreshadowed the limits of his power over a fractured party.

To win the support of far-right Republican holdouts, he agreed to a rule allowing a single member to trigger a no-confidence vote to remove the speaker. That came back to haunt him when fellow Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida introduced a resolution to do just that after McCarthy relied heavily on the votes of House Democrats to temporarily avert a government shutdown in September. Eight Republicans voted with all Democrats to remove McCarthy, making it the first time in U.S. history a House speaker was ousted by such a motion.

His successor, House Speaker Mike Johnson, has made similar decisions since taking over, including relying on Democrats to avert a shutdown in November, but has so far avoided McCarthy’s fate.

McCarthy has not hidden his disdain for the Republicans who voted for his removal, telling CNN last month that Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina did not deserve to be reelected, and the Republican Party would benefit “tremendously” if Gaetz was not in Congress. He also questioned the motives of Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee.

“They care a lot about press, not about policy, and so they seem to just want the press and the personality,” McCarthy told CNN.

Burchett later accused McCarthy of elbowing him in the back in a Capitol Hill hallway in retaliation for the vote, which McCarthy denied.

“If I were to hit somebody, they would know I hit them,” McCarthy said.

Courtesy: cbsnews