GOP 'publicly projecting pessimism' as hope in 'securing policy wins' dwindles: report

GOP 'publicly projecting pessimism' as hope in 'securing policy wins' dwindles: report
US Rep. Bob Good (R-VA), Image via screengrab/X.
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Top House Republicans on Tuesday expressed concern around their colleagues' inability to unite around government spending, according to Axios.

US Rep. Bob Good (R-VA), who's chair of the right-wing Freedom Caucus, told Axios Tuesday, "Past history would not indicate that we are willing to fight for good policy or reduced spending."

This comes after "[House Speaker Mike] Johnson (R-LA) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) struck an agreement over the weekend to keep total government spending this year at the levels set out in last year's bipartisan debt ceiling deal," the report notes.

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Chair of the Republican Study Committee US Rep. Kevin Hern (R-OK) told the news outlet, "I don't have a lot of confidence we have a lot of leverage" considering Democrats control the Senate and the White House.

Per Axios, "Hardliners feel particularly burned after the bipartisan passage of a major defense bill that excluded their many of their efforts to scale back military diversity programs and affirmative action, restrict access to abortion and gender-affirming care and rein in government surveillance."

Hern emphasized, "I think that you're going to see us just try to get the appropriations bills passed. With only a one or two vote margin, it's going to have to be very bipartisan, which means you're not going to get the policy riders that conservatives want."

Axios' full report is here.
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