共和党人掌控下几近停摆的国会


2026-04-30T08:00:51.415Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/30/politics/congress-gop-dysfunction-johnson

共和党将至少再掌控华盛顿六个月,但他们已经失去了国会一半的控制权。

众议院议长迈克·约翰逊所在的多数党席位仅差一票,内部内讧不断,如今他已不再拥有有效多数席位。从政府拨款到批准唐纳德·特朗普总统本人要求的关键间谍权力授权,共和党领导层正难以履行众议院最基本的职能,而这一切都发生在关键中期选举仅数月之际。

“我们实在无法在任何事情上达成一致,”得克萨斯州共和党众议员特洛伊·内尔斯周三表示,当时领导层正试图说服议员们克服程序性障碍,推进包括延长监控项目在内的核心优先事项。“现在本应是我们真正通过保守派立法的时刻。美国人民给了我们众议院的控制权……给了我们白宫……还给了我们参议院。但我们浪费了大量时间。我们错失了这些机遇。”

约翰逊试图将混乱归咎于民主党,但美国国会山和白宫内部的不满情绪日益高涨——许多人将国土安全部长达75天的停摆归咎于众议院的混乱,这一停摆威胁着未来几周机场出现更多混乱。

“事实上,这场停摆已经持续多久了?70多天?这充分证明了国会的机能失调,”加州众议员凯文·凯利说道。他今年正式退出共和党,但仍基本与共和党投票立场一致。

本周被搁置的法案、闭门抱怨以及停滞的议会活动加剧了共和党内部的紧张局势。

仅周三一天,众议院共和党领导层就将一场有争议的程序性投票开放了三个小时。他们将一项重大优先事项——农业法案——从议会议程中撤下,数小时后又在议员反抗后重新提上议程。(“这地方太离谱了,”肯塔基州众议员托马斯·马西在得知这一变故后在X平台上抱怨道。)

周三晚间,众议院在共和党为应对国土安全部停摆而推进的移民执法拨款法案上取得进展——经过数小时的施压后,该投票最终通过。

约翰逊对议员们控制力的削弱,让人们怀疑特朗普和国会山共和党领导层能否在未来完成其他任何重大优先事项,包括一项可能耗资高达1000亿美元的伊朗战争拨款方案。

这位议长维持四分五裂的众议院共和党团团结的能力,本就因这自大萧条以来最微弱的多数席位而充满挑战。尽管他试图给议员们留出空间处理各自的担忧,但最近几天议会内部的情绪急剧恶化。共和党人正逐渐接受特朗普支持率低迷、中东无休止的战争以及油价飙升的现实,而国会显然没有任何解决这些问题的策略。

此外,党团内部还有一群越来越我行我素的议员,他们在微弱多数席位的格局下拥有话语权,似乎愿意无视特朗普和约翰逊,以实现个人优先目标——再加上似乎永无止境的议员缺席和道德问题。

“听着,只需要两个人就能彻底搞垮这一切,”众议院预算主管乔迪·阿灵顿在谈到国土安全部拨款僵局时告诉CNN。

众议员史蒂夫·沃马克将这一微弱多数席位的局面形容为“混乱,我们就是这样。”“我们很擅长这个,”这位阿肯色州共和党人补充道。

对领导层来说,最大的麻烦或许是佛罗里达州众议员安娜·保利娜·卢纳或南卡罗来纳州众议员南希·梅斯这类强硬派议员。她们通过迫使众议院进行艰难投票、加入愿意阻挠程序性投票的团体,提升了个人知名度。还有众多身处竞争激烈选区的共和党人,他们在今年秋季的选举中岌岌可危,急切希望进行重大投票。

新泽西州共和党众议员杰夫·范·德鲁所在的选区就是潜在的摇摆选区之一,他一直恳求同僚们为了党派利益妥协。他警告称,如果议员们不彻底改变态度,选民会注意到这一点——并可能在11月发起反抗。

“我们必须团结起来。我们将面临一场非常艰难的选举。我们要么以微弱优势获胜,要么以微弱劣势失利,要么惨败。我们需要做出抉择,”他说。

已退休的参议员汤姆·蒂利斯在国会工作了11年,也提出了类似的批评。

“我认为我在众议院的同僚们应该开始团队合作。他们的行为已经引起了人们的注意。我们不能再将目前国会的机能失调归咎于民主党,这对那些在11月面临选情危险的选区候选人来说形象非常糟糕,”这位北卡罗来纳州共和党人说。“他们会为此后悔的”

议会爆发冲突与“意志较量”

就在约翰逊及其团队成功平息周三持续三小时的议会反抗后不久,议长再次陷入混乱。

爱荷华州众议员扎克·纳恩所在的州依赖生物燃料,而这正是有争议的农业法案的核心议题。他冲进众议院议长办公室,质问议长和卢纳就这项庞大法案达成的幕后交易。

当约翰逊将纳恩和卢纳带进一间私人房间时,卢纳大喊着为自己辩护:“我们想要不包含农药条款的农业法案!”(卢纳后来告诉CNN,她收到了一些共和党同僚的“恶毒”信息,因此不得不请约翰逊介入,制止她所称的威胁行为。)

议会现场的这场爆发非同寻常地展现了约翰逊所在政党内部众多相互对立的派系。他与某一派议员达成的任何协议,都可能激怒另一派——但同样强大的——团体。

这还不是共和党领导人唯一的麻烦。

保守派与党领导层就一项即将到期的强力监控法陷入紧张对峙。在过去几周的一次又一次会议上,领导层一再试图强行延长这项关键的间谍权力法案,而不采纳保守派推动的修改条款。

“这是一场意志较量,”推动修改该法案的保守派议员、共和党人基思·塞尔周三告诉CNN。“我们到底要不要保护美国公民?问题就这么简单。”

就连唐纳德·特朗普总统呼吁无附加条件延长该法案,以及中央情报局局长约翰·拉特克利夫和白宫顾问斯蒂芬·米勒直接施压,都未能对共和党产生多少影响。

当约翰逊以为上周达成了突破时,极右翼的众议院自由核心小组成员私下嗤之以鼻。据一位熟悉该文件的消息人士透露,这个强硬派团体分发了一份备忘录,称约翰逊的最新提案“换汤不换药,依旧软弱无力”。

最终,这些主张隐私的共和党议员迫使领导层将一项无关的加密措施附加到这项必须通过的间谍权力法案中——实际上摧毁了该法案在参议院通过的可能性,并在午夜截止日期前一天彻底打乱了最终通过的进程。参议院领导层在国会山另一端冷眼旁观,陷入慌乱,最终提议再次短期延长该法案,这只会延长这场闹剧。

“这就像一场胆小鬼博弈,双方都不想先让步,”一位熟悉谈判的消息人士告诉CNN。

这两起事件凸显了约翰逊本周面临的四面受困的局面:他试图在中期选举前国会迄今为止最紧张的立法周期间推进法案。他原本希望说服议员们重新授权这项关键的政府监控项目、支持农业法案条款,并支持一项程序性投票,最终让共和党得以结束国土安全部的预算僵局。

但在所有这些议题上,约翰逊都被迫实时重新调整计划。在原本被认为是本周最无争议的投票——农业法案上,共和党领导层被迫彻底取消审议该法案的计划,因为众多议员仍对生物燃料和农药相关关键条款不满。但数小时后,他们又被迫反转立场。

“我们面临的任务繁重, stakes极高,这是公共政策中最具争议的议题之一,”约翰逊周三进入国会大厦时谈到本周的议程时表示。

当天晚些时候,尽管本周不得不放弃部分议程,他仍表达了乐观态度。“整个党团内部来自全国不同地区的议员对所有这些事情的看法截然不同。有时进展快,有时慢,但我们会达成目标的,”他说。

自2023年秋季就任议长以来,约翰逊凭借微弱的席位优势艰难周旋,仍不时取得令人惊讶的胜利,包括一项大规模的边境和税收法案,这为他赢得了“神奇约翰逊”的绰号。

“我不认为这是领导层的问题。迈克·约翰逊在立法方面已经赢得了三枚勋章级别的胜利,”内华达州众议员马克·阿莫迪说。

但随着中期选举临近,以及特朗普忙于应对国内挑战和海外冲突,这一势头已被削弱。

宣布退休的共和党议员数量创下纪录。而留任的许多议员也因特朗普在全国范围内的选区重划战而惶惶不安。

例如,据一位知情人士透露,佛罗里达州议员对该州的选区重新划分感到非常焦虑,以至于一小撮议员最近迫使共和党领导层将一项濒危物种法案从议程中撤下,因为他们担心这会损害他们在新选区的政治前途。

民主党人处处伺机给共和党制造更多麻烦,这让约翰逊的工作更加复杂。本周,民主党人对共和党难以敲定每周议程感到非常愤怒——他们深夜召集众议院规则委员会会议,却在最后时刻推迟——于是在该委员会听证会上,在一名共和党议员的讽刺发言后,民主党人提出了数十项政治上棘手的修正案投票。

“微弱的多数席位让事情变得更加困难。党内存在各种分歧的观点。我们的多数党盟友显然认为,他们制造的混乱越多,对他们秋季选举越有利——他们是这么想的。我看到所有这些因素都凑到了一起,”在众议院任职32年的俄克拉荷马州共和党众议员弗兰克·卢卡斯告诉CNN。

在国会大厦的另一端,共和党参议员们也感到困惑不解。

参议院曾两次全票通过一项法案,为除美国移民海关总署和美国海关与边境保护局之外的所有国土安全部部门提供资金,这两个部门已于去年夏天通过总统签署的一项政策法案获得单独拨款。但约翰逊已将这项可重新开放该部门大部分机构的法案搁置了近一个月,因为其党团内部的保守派反对在众议院就任何不提供移民资金的法案进行投票,尽管他们明白该部门很快将通过共和党单独提出的法案获得资金。

“我不认为国会大厦南北两端之间有电话线路相通,”阿莫迪在谈到两党就如何在两院通过拨款法案缺乏明确沟通时打趣道。

Inside the GOP’s barely functioning Congress

2026-04-30T08:00:51.415Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/30/politics/congress-gop-dysfunction-johnson

Republicans will control Washington for at least six more months, but they’ve already lost control of one-half of Congress.

Marred by infighting in his razor-thin majority, Speaker Mike Johnson no longer has a functional majority in the House. GOP leaders are struggling to fulfill the chamber’s most basic role on issues from government funding to authorizing critical spy powers that President Donald Trump himself has demanded, all just months before a critical midterm election.

“We can’t really agree on much of anything,” Rep. Troy Nehls, a Republican from Texas, said on Wednesday as leadership was trying to convince members to clear a procedural hurdle on the House floor to move ahead on key priorities, including the surveillance program extension. “This is our time to actually pass conservative legislation. That the American people gave us the gavel. They gave us the White House. … They gave us the Senate. And we have squandered an enormous amount of time away. We’ve squandered these opportunities.”

Johnson has tried to blame Democrats for the chaos, but frustrations are rising inside the US Capitol and at the White House – with many pointing to the House disarray for prolonging a 75-day shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security that is threatening more chaos at airports in the coming weeks.

“The fact that this has gone on, what are we at? 70-something days? It’s a stunning testament to congressional dysfunction,” Rep. Kevin Kiley of California, an independent who formally left the party this year but still largely votes with the GOP.

And scrapped bills, venting behind closed doors and stalled floor activity this week has ratcheted up tensions in the conference.

On Wednesday alone, House GOP leaders held open a contentious procedural vote for three hours. They pulled one huge priority — the farm bill — from the floor and then brought it back hours later after a revolt from members. (“This place is insane,” Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky griped on X, when he learned of the switch.)

Late Wednesday evening, the House took a step forward in a GOP effort to fund immigration enforcement amid the ongoing DHS shutdown – a vote that succeeded but only after hours of arm twisting.

Johnson’s weakening grip on his members throws into doubt whether Trump and Hill GOP leaders will be able to deliver on any other major priorities ahead, including a funding package for the Iran war that could cost as much as $100 billion.

The speaker’s ability to keep his fractious House GOP in line was never simple in the smallest majority since the Great Depression. While he has tried to give his members space to work through their concerns, the mood in the chamber has dramatically soured in recent days. Republicans are coming to terms with Trump’s poor approval ratings, an unending war in the Middle East and spiking gas prices — with no apparent strategy in Congress to fix any of it.

Then there’s the group of increasingly rogue actors within the conference who are empowered in the narrow majority and seem willing to shirk both Trump and Johnson to achieve personal priorities — on top of a seemingly perpetual struggle with absences and ethics issues.

“Look, all it takes is two to shut this whole thing down,” House budget chief Jodey Arrington told CNN of the DHS funding standoff.

Rep. Steve Womack characterized the narrow majority as “chaos, that’s what we are.” “We are good at that,” the Arkansas Republican added.

Perhaps the biggest headache for leadership are hardliners like Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida or Nancy Mace of South Carolina, who have elevated their personal profiles as they force the House to take tough votes and join groups willing to hold up procedural ones. Then there are the scores of rattled Republicans in competitive seats this fall who are anxious to take big votes.

GOP Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, who sits in one of those potentially in-play seats, has been pleading with his colleagues to simply agree to compromise for the sake of the party. If members don’t agree to a major attitude shift, he warned, voters would take notice – and potentially revolt in November.

“We’ve got to get together. We’re going to have a really hard, tough election. We’re either going to win by a little, lose by a little or lose by a lot. And we got a decision to make,” he said.

Retiring Sen. Thom Tillis, who has spent 11 years across the Capitol, offered a similar reproach.

“I think my colleagues over there need to start playing team ball. Their behavior is starting to be noticed by people. We can’t blame Democrats for the dysfunction that is going on over there right now and it’s a really bad look for people going into at-risk districts in November,” the North Carolina Republican said. “They’re gonna live to regret it”

A floor outburst and a ‘test of the wills’

Just moments after Johnson and his team successfully quelled a three-hour floor revolt on Wednesday, the speaker was thrown back into tumult.

Rep. Zach Nunn of Iowa – whose state relies on biofuel that’s at the center of a contentious farm bill – stormed onto the House floor to confront the speaker and Luna for making side deals on the sprawling package.

As Johnson ushered Nunn and Luna into a private room, Luna shouted her own defense: “We want the farm bill with no pesticide provision!” (Luna later told CNN she’d received such “nasty” messages from some of her Republican colleagues that she felt the need to get Johnson involved to stop what she characterized as threatening behavior.)

The outburst on the floor was an extraordinary display of the many competing factions in Johnson’s party. Any agreement he makes with one bloc of members risks enraging a separate – but equally powerful – group.

That was not the Republican leader’s only headache.

Conservatives and party leaders have been embroiled in a tense standoff over a powerful surveillance law that teetered on expiration. In meeting after meeting over the last few weeks, leadership repeatedly sought to force the extension of the critical spy powers bill without making the changes pushed by conservatives.

“This is a test of the wills,” GOP Rep. Keith Self, one of the conservatives pushing for changes to the bill, told CNN on Wednesday. “Are we going to protect our American citizens or are we not? It’s that simple a question.”

Even President Donald Trump’s call for a clean reauthorization and direct pressure campaigns from CIA Director John Ratcliffe and White House adviser Stephen Miller did little to move the party.

When Johnson thought he had clinched a breakthrough last week, members of the far-right House Freedom Caucus privately scoffed. That hardliner group sent around a memo calling his latest proposal “weaker sauce in a new bottle,” according to a source familiar with the document.

Ultimately, those privacy hawk Republicans forced leadership to tack on an unrelated crypto measure to the must-pass spy powers bill – effectively tanking its chances in the Senate and upending the road to final passage just a day before the midnight deadline. Senate leaders, who looked on from across the Capitol, were left scrambling and ultimately suggested another short-term extension, which will only prolong the drama.

“This has been a game of chicken where neither side has wanted to blink,” a source familiar with the negotiations told CNN.

The two episodes underscore how Johnson has taken hits from all sides this week as he’s tried to maneuver bills in one of Congress’ most intense weeks of legislating so far before the midterms. He aimed to convince his members to reauthorize the critical government spying program, to back a farm bill measure and support a procedural vote that would eventually allow Republicans to end the DHS budget standoff.

But on all of those issues, Johnson was repeatedly forced to recalibrate his plans in real time. On the farm bill – which was expected to be the least controversial vote of the week – Republican leaders were forced to scrap plans to consider the bill altogether, with a slew of members still disgruntled over key provisions over biofuels and pesticides. But hours later, they were forced to reverse course.

“There’s a lot on our plates. It’s a lot of high stakes, and it’s one of the most controversial matters in public policy,” Johnson said of this week’s agenda as he entered the Capitol Wednesday.

Later in the day, he expressed optimism, despite having to forfeit agenda items this week. “You have very different opinions about all of these things across the conference from different regions of the country who see these issues differently. Sometimes it goes quicker than others, but we will get there,” he said.

Since he took the gavel in fall 2023, Johnson has navigated his slim margins and still pulled out at-times shocking wins, including a massive border and tax bill that earned him the reputation “Magic Johnson” in some circles.

“I don’t think it’s a leadership problem over here. Mike Johnson has won like the medal of honor legislatively three times,” Rep. Mark Amodei of Nevada said.

But that momentum has been blunted as the midterms approach and as Trump is engulfed in managing challenges at home and conflict abroad.

A record number of Republicans have announced they’re retiring. And many of those who are staying have been rattled by Trump’s coast-to-coast redistricting war.

Florida lawmakers, for instance, were so anxious about their state’s map redraw that a small gang of lawmakers recently forced GOP leaders to pull an endangered species bill from the floor out of concern it could hurt them politically in new seats, according to a person familiar.

Johnson’s job has only been made more complicated by Democrats’ eagerness to cause further pain for Republicans wherever possible. This week, Democrats were so furious at the Republicans’ struggle to set the weekly agenda – calling late-night meetings of the House Rules Committee only to postpone them at the last minute – that they pushed dozens of politically difficult amendment votes in that same hearing after a sarcastic comment from one of their GOP members.

“Bare margins make things more difficult. The family has a divergent set of views. Our friends in the majority obviously realize the more chaos they can contribute to, the better off – they think – for them in the fall. I see all those pieces coming together,” Republican Rep. Frank Lucas of Oklahoma, who’s spent 32 years in the House, told CNN.

On the other side of the building, GOP senators has been left scratching their heads.

Twice, the Senate unanimously passed a bill that would fund every part of DHS besides US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and US Customs and Border Protection, which were separately funded through the president’s signature policy bill last summer. But Johnson has sat on the legislation to reopen large swaths of the department for nearly a month as conservatives in his conference balked at putting anything on the floor that zeroed out immigration funding even as they understood the department would soon be covered by a GOP-only bill.

“I don’t think the phone lines go from the north to the south end of the building,” Amodei quipped of the lack of clear communication over how the funding would ever be passed in both chambers.

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