Trump appears with Mike Johnson hours after House passes FISA bill
Trump appears with Mike Johnson
Joint Appearance After FISA Bill Passage
House
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) looks on as Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) speaks
during a news conference after a House Republican Conference meeting at the
U.S. Capitol on March 20, 2024.
Speaker Mike Johnson and Rep. Dan Newhouse
Former
president Donald Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.)
are appearing together at a news conference Friday for their first time since
Johnson became speaker, coinciding with a roiling effort to oust him from his
position led by one of Trump’s staunchest allies in Congress.
Johnson's Leadership Amid Challenges
The
event comes on the heels of another revolt this week by hard-right House
Republicans, who tanked a procedural vote on key intelligence-gathering
legislation as a warning shot to the speaker. (The bill eventually passed the
House on Friday.)
Trump and Johnson's Shared Agenda
Johnson
is in possibly the most precarious stretch of his five-month speakership, as he
seeks to negotiate a national security package with funding for Ukraine and
other foreign allies, while fending off a challenge to his job from Rep. Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.). Trump has not weighed in on Greene’s push to
remove the Louisiana Republican.
Election Integrity and Border Security
Friday’s
meeting with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida was not spurred by
Greene’s threat, according to two people familiar with the plans, who spoke on
the condition of anonymity to speak candidly about their relationship. Instead,
Trump and Johnson have found common ground on two issues that unite them:
election integrity and border security. They decided to unveil a new
legislative effort together during Johnson’s already scheduled visit to
Mar-a-Lago. Trump and Johnson met privately before speaking to reporters.
Johnson's Alignment with Trump's Agenda
Johnson
and Trump are expected to speak about noncitizen voting. It is already illegal
for noncitizens to vote in federal elections, and there are few documented
cases of noncitizens voting.
Thompson's Statement
Johnson
began forming a relationship with Trump in early 2020 after Johnson was chosen
to serve on the White House defense team in the president’s first Senate
impeachment trial, according to the people familiar with the relationship.
Later that year, Johnson recruited 125 House Republicans to sign on to a legal
brief that asked the Supreme Court to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 election wins
in four key states. Johnson also leaned on his credentials as a constitutional
lawyer to help colleagues sharpen their arguments against certifying the
election on Jan. 6, 2021.
Trump's Endorsement of Johnson
In
a statement ahead of Friday’s news conference, Rep. Bennie G. Thompson
(D-Miss.), the former chairman of the House select committee that investigated
the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, said that the “sham event at Trump’s country
club should remind the American people of a dangerous truth: Donald Trump is a
threat to our democracy and a danger to our Constitution.”
Ongoing Communication Between Trump and Johnson
Johnson’s
ongoing support of Trump — he has repeatedly described himself as a MAGA
Republican — earned him the former president’s backing when he ran for speaker
after the ouster of Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). After tanking a speakership
bid by Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), Trump posted on social media that while he was
not going to formally choose among the candidates in the race, his “strong
SUGGESTION is to go with the leading candidate, Mike Johnson.”
Uncertainty Surrounding Trump's Public
Support
Since
becoming speaker, Johnson has visited Mar-a-Lago multiple times for private
meetings and fundraisers.
Impact of Trump's Directive on FISA
Bill
Johnson
and Trump are often in touch, with both men trading notes from their vantage
points at the top of Republican politics, according to the people familiar with
the relationship. The former president keeps the speaker up to speed on the
latest polls in states and developments in his campaign, while Johnson informs
Trump about what is happening in the House.
FISA Bill Passes After Amendments
It’s
unclear whether Trump will speak Friday in support of Johnson’s handling of the
ideologically fractious House Republican conference. Johnson is facing numerous
obstacles this month, starting with the false start in reauthorizing a part of
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which has divided privacy and
national security hawks in the conference.
Monitoring Johnson's Handling of Ukraine Funding
After
Trump posted on social media that House Republicans should “KILL FISA,” several
far-right lawmakers — many of whom had already decided to vote against the
measure — used a procedural hurdle Wednesday to temporarily prevent debate on
the measure. Asked whether Trump’s interference was hurtful for the legislative
process, Johnson said: “It’s never helpful for the majority party to take down
a rule. What it does, ultimately of course, is it weakens our hands with the
Senate and the White House.”
Greene's Position and Trump's Presidential Support
The
bill passed Friday after Johnson winnowed the reauthorization period from five
years to two, arguing that far-right members can make the changes they want to
the surveillance provision when Trump is reelected and House Republicans keep
the majority — two outcomes that are not guaranteed.
Relationship Between GOP Speakers and Trump
Far-right
members are also keeping a watchful eye on how Johnson handles Ukraine funding.
Greene has said she would move to oust him from the speakership if he puts such
a bill on the House floor.
“I never speak for [Trump] or say what
he should or shouldn’t do,” Greene said Friday. “He’s the leader of the party.
He is our Republican presidential candidate that I’m supporting and trying to
help win in November.”
Republican speakers of the House have
had to keep Trump close. McCarthy began forming a close relationship with Trump
during his 2016 presidential campaign, and his allegiance to Trump earned him
the nickname “My Kevin.” McCarthy often leveraged that alliance for
his political ambitions, frequently telling Trump to hold off endorsing more
extreme candidates in swing districts, which helped Republicans win the
majority in the 2022 midterms.
But their relationship ebbed and flowed over the years. The most
obvious break and reconciliation happened after McCarthy blamed the Jan. 6,
2021, insurrection at the Capitol on Trump, but he later went to Mar-a-Lago to
make up. Though McCarthy often followed Trump’s lead, the former president
stayed on the sidelines when McCarthy was under fire by far-right Republicans
in the conference last year, ultimately resulting in Trump not defending him
ahead of his ouster from the speakership.
No comments: