Are Defense Hawks Reconsolidating Power in the House GOP?

Washington Free Beacon put a depressingly
pro-defense-spending spin
on the results of this week’s
Republican Study Committee chair elections:

Defense-oriented conservatives won out in races for the
chairmanships of key House panels, and in at least one case, a
member’s perceived weakness on defense issues may have scuttled his
bid to lead an influential bloc of House conservatives.

Tuesday’s leadership elections, which will determine some of the
most influential lawmakers of the 114th Congress, could prove
another setback for what was once perceived as a rising tide of
libertarianism in the GOP and an accompanying aversion to military
intervention and defense spending.

That sort of noninterventionist position contributed to the
defeat of Rep. Mick Mulvaney’s (R., S.C.) bid to lead the
Republican Study Committee, a 173-member bloc of the party’s most
conservative members.

RSC elected Rep. Bill Flores (R., Texas) as chairman on Tuesday.
He took 84 votes to Mulvaney’s 57 in the second round of
voting.

“Pro-defense Republicans, led by Rep. [Trent] Franks [(R.,
Ariz.)], rallying played strong role in torpedoing Mulvaney,” said
a House Republican aide with knowledge of RSC’s deliberations.
“Republicans are taking back their signature issue, national
security,” the aide said.

More deep thought on the whats and whys of that RSC election

from The Hill
, where Florida’s Raul Labrador blames
House leadership on manipulating the results,
and National Journal
, which sees it in a larger
context of “serious firebrand cons v. more mainstream GOP
leadership.”

I
blogged on some RSC cons v. establishment drama
last year.

Nick Gillespie noted earlier this month: “Just
How Quickly will GOP Try to Ramp Up Defense Spending?
Super-Quickly
.”

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1qCLKhp
via IFTTT

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *