Republicans are dooming their own agenda with unraveling strategy

Republicans are dooming their own agenda with unraveling strategy
House Speaker Mike Johnson shakes hands with President Donald Trump in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., July 22, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura

House Speaker Mike Johnson shakes hands with President Donald Trump in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., July 22, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura

Trump

Republicans in the House are contending with a number of "must-pass bills," but according to a new report from The Hill, their own troubled approach is dooming their odds of getting them passed anytime soon.

In a report published Wednesday morning, The Hill explained that the House GOP's "go-it-alone strategy keeps hitting walls," leaving crucial bills in jeopardy. These bills include funding to end the historic Department of Homeland Security shutdown, an expansion of spying powers for the federal government and setting farming policies in the U.S. "for the next half decade."

Under the leadership of House Speaker Mike Johnson, House Republicans "have opted to cut Democrats from the negotiations" for these bills altogether, making the gamble "that they can rally their troops to ram the proposals through the lower chamber on largely partisan votes." Per The Hill, "the strategy has clear advantages," largely based on the ability to craft legislation without capitulating to any demands from the Democratic minority, but in reality, the party's razor-thin majority has made the task much less manageable.

"But in a chamber with wafer-thin margins, the tactic is running into wall after wall as Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and his leadership team struggle to unite their GOP conference behind bills that can satisfy the competing ideologies within the group," The Hill explained. "Those dynamics forced GOP leaders to delay the rules process governing the three bills, and they raise real questions about whether any of the proposals can pass if and when they reach the floor later this week."

"You have a small majority and rather than working with us, you ice us out,” Rep. Jim McGovern, a Massachusetts Democrat, told the outlet. “We find ourselves in these situations where we come to the Rules Committee, we have long meetings, debates on amendments, and then we have to adjourn because the people on your side are fighting with each other.”

This strategy presents even larger hurdles if these bills are ever able to make it to the Senate. In that chamber, Republicans would need to satisfy enough Democrats to overcome the 60-vote filibuster threshold, something that is highly unlikely for bills crafted exclusively by the House GOP.

This particular roadblock is causing major "headwinds" for the DHS funding bill. The Senate previously passed a bipartisan funding measure that, per Democratic demands, did not include new funding for ICE. House Republicans gave that bill the cold shoulder amid a push from its more conservative members to increase immigration enforcement funding. They are now working on a version of the funding measure that funds the entirety of DHS, something that Democrats are almost certain stonewall, leaving the process to continue going in circles.

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