I swear to you I’m not making this up: The House GOP majority just voted to extend their traditional August recess by a full week despite the fact that our country is in the midst of one of the most severe constitutional crises in history.
Here’s an excerpt from a story at RollCall:
House leaders canceled votes scheduled for next week as the GOP majority struggles to pass its fiscal 2025 appropriations bills.
The decision to scrap next week’s session came a day after Republican leaders had to yank the Energy-Water spending bill from the floor amid growing doubts they could muster enough votes to pass it with their razor-thin majority.
Democrats have been marching in lockstep against the GOP-written spending measures, and some Republicans signaled Tuesday night they might oppose the Energy-Water bill amid concerns over Energy Department permitting standards and a Georgia port expansion project, among other things.
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, R-Tenn., chair of the Energy-Water Appropriations Subcommittee, said his bill won’t be brought back to the floor until September at the earliest, as the House prepares to leave town after Thursday morning votes for an extra-long August recess.
“It’s a good rock-solid bill, but a few members had some issues with it and we’re going to try to address that and come back in September,” Fleischmann said Wednesday.
He said a dispute with Georgia Republicans over funding they wanted to study a potential Savannah harbor-deepening project to allow larger container ships through to the port there was among the issues they need to sort out.
Fleischmann pointed out his bill didn’t fund the study because it is precluded under the current water resources development authorization law. The latest WRDA update bill, which passed the House on Monday, would change that, but that measure still has a ways to go before reaching the president’s desk.
“For some, they felt they wanted some things on the water side that they didn’t get and we’re going to take a look at those things. Some of the things under law we could not get. We could not authorize on an appropriations bill,” Fleischmann said. “But we’re going to have a good, furtive conversation and give it another shot in September.”
Republicans were still hoping to pass their Interior-Environment bill Wednesday night after considering amendments earlier in the day. But it was also possible they will forgo a final vote on the bill so as not to risk another defeat.
House Appropriations Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., said the Interior-Environment vote was “too close to call” at the moment, but he’s not ruling out passage later on Wednesday evening. “We wouldn’t be proceeding today if they didn’t think they were in the ballpark,” Cole said.
The House two weeks ago voted down its Legislative Branch bill, mostly because of a provision blocking a pay raise for members.
While the House has passed four of its 12 annual spending bills, totaling more than two-thirds of annual agency budgets, other GOP-written measures increasingly appear out of reach. Democrats oppose the deep cuts to nondefense spending and conservative policy riders included in the bills, and just a few GOP defections can be enough to sink a bill on the floor, given the slim majority.
Dwindling agenda
The only two remaining legislative items on the docket this month include a bipartisan resolution to establish a task force to investigate the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, and a more partisan one attacking the border enforcement record of Vice President Kamala Harris, the expected Democratic presidential nominee.
It appears House GOP leaders want to send members home to campaign Thursday after the Harris resolution vote — something that unites the party — rather than continue to suffer through divisive spending bill debates.
GOP leaders all week had been mulling the possibility of sending members home early rather than remain in session next week as previously scheduled. Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Wednesday that the decision to cancel votes next week wasn’t a direct result of problems with the appropriations bills.
“It’s not related to that. We’ve had a tumultuous couple of weeks in American politics and everybody’s, to be honest, still tired from our convention, and it’s just a good time to give everybody time to go home to their districts and campaign a little bit. We’ll come back and regroup and continue to work on this.” [Emphasis added]
[End]
Oh, gosh, the House Republicans have a bad case of the sleepies, so it’s time to extend their 5-week recess to 6 weeks.
Honestly, has any more useless pack of people ever existed in human history?
How depressing.
That is all.
Depressing isn't strong enough, David! It's maddening evidence every single one of these people should be primaried at the next opportunity. We have the most asinine, backward and incompetent bunch of leaders imaginable. They all hate us and we need to act accordingly!
Okay let me get this straight, they drank to much at the convention, got some Bidenesk jet lag, and their scared in their hangovers they will forget how to vote... Can someone please tell me why these asses get pay raises? Not to mention the disaster going on in our country right now. We have to stop this shit. If we loose this election it will be a great disaster and could even start a civil war, we are seriously in a 'cold civil war' right now.