Ben Shapiro Dissects The GOP’s House Speaker Battle, And Why It May Be About To Get Even Messier

The Republican battle over who will inherit Nancy Pelosi’s speaker of the House gavel may be about to get even messier, both behind the scenes and in front of the public, according to Ben Shapiro.

California Rep. Kevin McCarthy, who served as House minority leader before the GOP won a majority in November, seemed poised to become the nation’s third-most powerful elected official until a small group of Republicans refused to back him in a series of votes this week. In a Thursday morning tweet thread, Shapiro laid out what is happening behind the scenes, and indicated that there could be division among the 20 Republican holdouts.

“Some, like [Texas Rep.] Chip Roy, have an actual strategy to exact concessions, many of which are good and proper,” the Daily Wire co-founder, best-selling author and podcast host wrote. “Others refuse to vote McCarthy no matter what. They have no plan whatsoever.”

There is a major divide among the 20 or so holdouts against McCarthy. Some, like Chip Roy (R-TX), have an actual strategy to exact concessions, many of which are good and proper. Others refuse to vote McCarthy no matter what. They have no plan whatsoever.

— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) January 5, 2023

The holdout group met with McCarthy Wednesday afternoon, but it was not known what possible concessions were discussed. McCarthy has at times shown a willingness to meet the group’s demands but has also bristled at being dictated to by a group at odds with over 200 members of the Republican caucus.

For now, McCarthy needs a majority of the 435-member body’s votes to become speaker. The midterm election gave Republicans a 222-213 majority, meaning McCarthy must get all but four Republicans to support him unless he were to somehow gain the votes of Democrats, who are solidly behind New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries.

So far, the House has held six votes in two days, with the holdout group first backing Steve Scalise of Louisiana and then Jim Jordan of Ohio, both of whom have put their support behind McCarthy. In the Wednesday votes, the Republican holdouts voted for Florida Rep. Byron Donalds, who initially had supported McCarthy, but then voted for himself.

It is the first time in a century that a vote for House speaker has gone to multiple ballots. In the most recent vote, McCarthy had 201 votes, after Indiana Rep. Victoria Sparks voted “present.” Voting was expected to resume Thursday.

Using their leverage to hold McCarthy’s feet to the fire on issues like runaway spending could work for the holdout group, Shapiro said. But that would mean concessions or assurances from McCarthy could ultimately win the its backing. The problem, Shapiro said, is that a faction of the holdouts appears to refuse to support McCarthy under any circumstances.

“If you want to drain the swamp, you cannot put the biggest alligator in charge of the exercise,” firebrand Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz said on Tuesday.

Texas Rep. Chip Roy, (l.), may be open to a deal, according to Shapiro, but Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, (r.) appears to be in the "Never McCarthy" camp. (Getty Images)

Texas Rep. Chip Roy, (l.), may be open to a deal, according to Shapiro, but Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, (r.) appears to be in the “Never McCarthy” camp. (Getty Images)

Even former President Trump’s plea for the party to coalesce around McCarthy has fallen on deaf ears, despite the fact that many if not most of the holdout group are ardent Trump supporters.

Shapiro noted one possible scenario in which GOP holdouts could force a “wild counterplay” that could backfire on them. It would involve lifting the majority requirement for electing a new speaker.

“That counterplay could take the form of Republicans and Democrats voting to appoint the Speaker by plurality rather than majority,” Shapiro wrote. “If that happens, this puts the ‘Never McCarthy’ group in the position of either voting for McCarthy, or letting Hakeem Jeffries become speaker.”

Cardi B Fumes Over Surging Food Costs: ‘What The F*** Is Going On?’

Rapper Cardi B fumed in a video she posted to social media Wednesday evening over how food prices have surged under the Biden administration.

Cardi B, who previously encouraged people to vote for Biden, has expressed frustration over the last couple of years with the state of the economy and inflation.

“I get a summary of the money that’s being spent in my home every week,” she said. “So, when I’m starting to see that like groceries is like tripling up, it’s like, hey yo, what the f*** is going on? I want to see for myself what the f*** s*** is being spent on. And like when I go to the f***ing supermarket, like I went to the supermarket, I’m seeing that everything tripled up.”

“Lettuce was like $2 a couple of months ago and now it’s like f***ing $7. Of course I’m gonna say something! The f***?” she continued. “Cause if I think that s*** is crazy, I can only imagine what middle class people or people in the hood is motherf***ing thinking.”

“So, yes, I’m going to say something,” she concluded. “The f***? And I have a big platform so I do want everybody that’s responsible for these f***ing prices to put that s*** the f*** down. They gonna see my s***, they might put it down.”

WATCH:

PSA!!!! pic.twitter.com/YpJmHmuT2D

— Cardi B (@iamcardib) January 5, 2023

Back in December, the rapper warned that the U.S. was in a recession.

“We going through a recession…..Merry Christmas,” she tweeted.

After another Twitter user responded with “Says the rapper worth 40 million,” Cardi B noted that just because she is wealthy does not mean she could be hurt by a poor economy.

“I’m worth more [than] that and guess what? If I don’t save, work and budget I could lose it too!” she tweeted.

Related: ‘I Could Lose It Too’: Cardi B Says Her Massive Net Worth Isn’t Recession-Proof, Fans React