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All The Things Kevin McCarthy Gave Away To Become House Speaker

WASHINGTON — Two days after barely winning his leadership post, Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) will preside over the House on Monday night in its first vote: passing rules that conservatives hope will make him as weak as possible.

Lawmakers are set to vote to approve the GOP’s House rules package, which lays the groundwork for how the chamber will operate for the next two years. McCarthy made all kinds of concessions to members of the House Freedom Caucus in order to become speaker, and his promises are sprinkled throughout .

“We don’t have any idea what promises were made or what gentleman’s handshakes were made,” Mace said in a CBS News interview. “We just have no idea at this point. And it does give me quite a bit of heartburn because that’s not what we ran on.”

Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), who withheld his support from McCarthy through numerous rounds of votes last week, said that he and his Freedom Caucus colleagues only changed their votes to help McCarthy after he told them the House would follow a traditional budget process and “produce a budget that actually balances by cuts.”

No federal program will necessarily be spared, he told HuffPost, not even Social Security retirement benefits.

“The only way you’re going to get a balanced budget is [to] make cuts,” Norman said. “Everybody’s a fiscal conservative until it cuts a particular program that they like.”

Some of McCarthy’s concessions to conservatives are laid out in the House rules package, but some are part of less formal handshake agreements he has made. Here’s a running list of all the concessions he’s reportedly made in exchange for Freedom Caucus members helping him to become speaker.

  • Any member can call for a vote to oust the speaker
  • McCarthy’s leadership PAC won’t play in safe open primaries
  • A debt ceiling hike must be paired with spending cuts
  • Freedom Caucus members get three of the nine seats on the House Rules Committee, which controls what bills and amendments reach the floor
  • The House will cap fiscal 2024 spending bills at fiscal 2022 levels, which translates to about $130 billion less than the recent omnibus spending bill
  • A new point of order against unauthorized appropriations in a general appropriations bill in excess of the most recent enacted level.
  • A new House Judiciary subcommittee, led by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), to probe the “weaponization” of the federal government
  • Votes on a border security plan by Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), a Freedom Caucus member, that calls for finishing the border wall and expelling migrants attempting to cross the border
  • A promise to move 12 appropriations bills individually, not in an omnibus
  • The House will only consider spending bills under open rules, meaning any member can offer amendments that could gut or kill the bills
  • The House will remove metal detectors from outside the chamber and end proxy voting, both policies put in place by Pelosi
  • Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), who conservatives wanted for speaker instead of McCarthy, is McCarthy’s chosen appointee for the House GOP Steering panel, which decides committee assignments
  • A ban on taxpayer dollars going toward abortions, even though federal law already prohibits this.
  • A floor vote on a bill establishing term limits on all House members.

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