Speaker of the House Mike Johnson is now dealing with a razor-thin margin in the Republican’s House voting edge, and can only afford one defection on a party-line vote to pass legislation favored by his side of the aisle.
That has created a dilemma: Will Republicans who have been primary losers still be motivated to show up for House votes?
Congress reporter Olivia Beavers noted in a tweet that there’s “broader concern among senior Rs” about whether Republican primary losers are “motivated enough to fly back for votes each week they are in session.”
In another tweet, reporter Reese Gorman put a finer point on it, citing Texas Republicans Dan Crenshaw and Wesley Hunt, who are “both out of jobs now and one (Hunt) rarely showed in the first place, what’s to motivate them to keep coming back?”
The New York Times reports that concern over the thin Republican margin has been part of the dynamic since President Trump’s 2025 triumph. Republicans like Crenshaw, who occasionally reach across the aisle, gain outsize power, although there are consequences for bucking the party leaders. Crenshaw was the only Texas Republican not to get an endorsement in his primary election from President Donald Trump Trump.
Major legislation can’t come to the House floor without a vote to set the debate ground rules. With thin margins, Republicans won’t be able to move their agenda forward. Under House rules, tie votes fail. Which means that a lot of GOP hopes rest on under-motivated lame ducks getting on a plane.
Which means that a lot of GOP hopes rest on under-motivated lame ducks getting on a plane.