The end-of-term reviews of John Boehner’s House speakership are in, and they aren’t pretty.
“The conduct of the Republican leadership was disgraceful, it was indefensible and it was immoral.”
“There was a betrayal.”
“Disappointing and disgusting.”
“It’s inexcusable.”
“Failed that most basic test of public service.”
And this was coming from the Republicans.
The spark: Boehner’s last-minute decision to let the 112th Congress fade into history without a vote on the $60 billion Hurricane Sandy relief package. In a sense, this was an outrage, because such recovery bills traditionally pass without a fuss. But in another sense, it followed a familiar script: Tea Party Republicans balked at taking up the spending bill (it had enough votes to pass), and because the Tea Party rules the House GOP, Boehner obeyed.
The Sandy sidestep provided a perfect coda for the first two years of this Republican-controlled House, which only by a loose definition can still be called a legislative body. Lawmakers in both parties are congratulating themselves for passing a bill to avoid the “fiscal cliff,” but they did little more than approve a short-term fix that postpones the standoff 60 days. Ominously, even this stopgap measure failed to win the votes of two-thirds of House Republicans, including top Boehner lieutenants Eric Cantor and Kevin McCarthy, who preferred to risk economic calamity.