House Republicans Are Divided—Fourteen Make Left Turn and Vote Against Speaker Johnson’s Funding Bill

Gridlock in Congress is nothing new.

Lately, however, the dysfunction has reached a new level, with Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson facing opposition from his own party.

Promises to fix the mess in Washington do not presently entail a unified direction within the GOP.

This from thepatriotjournal.com.

The current showdown over government funding is just the latest example of how Congress often appears more like a reality TV show than a functioning entity. And Republicans are not just battling the communists/globalists; they are often at odds with one another.

From Daily Caller:

Over a dozen Republicans voted alongside 206 Democrats Wednesday to block Speaker Mike Johnson’s revived funding…

Johnson’s continuing resolution failed in the House 202-220 with 14 Republicans voting to block the funding bill…

A senior Republican aide told the Daily Caller News Foundation:

There is nothing more bipartisan in this town than the appropriators and the defense contractors showing up to screw the American people.

That is truly the last bipartisan effort in this town.

The latest casualty?

Speaker Mike Johnson’s attempt at a continuing resolution (CR) to fund the government. His bill was shot down 202-220, with 14 Republicans voting alongside the Left to block the funding plan. Johnson’s CR, which would have kept the government running for six months, wasn’t perfect, but it aimed to avoid a shutdown.

The problem?

Too many of Johnson’s fellow Republicans didn’t think it went far enough to curb spending. They weren’t willing to compromise, leaving Johnson caught between party purists and [communists/globalists] eager to see him fail.

Republican Rep. Matt Rosendale of Montana summed up the issue, calling a CR:

[A] crutch [that allows Congress to avoid making the tough decisions].

Others, like Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, dismissed the CR as “failure theater.”

For them, the six-month resolution was not the solution—it was just kicking the can down the road, again.

Speaker Johnson had tried to sweeten the deal by attaching the SAVE Act—a voter integrity measure that would require proof of citizenship for voter registration. But for many, that was not enough to justify the bill’s shortcomings.

The lack of unity among Republicans has opened the door for communists/globalists, who are happy to sit back and watch the chaos unfold.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the CR “unserious and unacceptable,” while Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer declared that only bipartisan solutions would keep the government open.

The White House, for its part, has already promised to veto Johnson’s bill if it somehow passes the Senate.

Meanwhile, Trump has made his feelings crystal clear. Never one to shy away from a fight:

[He] called for Republicans to shut down the government unless the CR includes absolute guarantees on election security.

In a fiery Truth Social post, Trump urged his party to block any funding bill that does not address illegal voting, accusing the Left of trying to “stuff” voter registrations with illegal aliens.

As it stands, the Republicans remain divided, with some members pushing for fiscal discipline and others unwilling to accept anything less than perfection.

Speaker Johnson’s challenge seems to be:

[U]nite a fractured party and keep the government running.

Whether he can do that, however, remains to be seen.