According to Bob Novak, whose Republican sources are pretty solid, there’s a good reason the House GOP won’t choose new leaders until Feb. 2 — they’re not at all anxious to get back to work.
House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert turned down a White House request to elect a permanent successor to Tom DeLay as majority leader in advance of President Bush’s State of the Union address on Jan. 31. Republican House members simply did not want to return early to Washington after their winter vacation.
Bush’s aides wanted an early vote, perhaps on Monday, Jan. 30, so that speculation over DeLay’s successor and a possibly bitter internal campaign would not distract from the president’s speech. But Hastert set the voting for Feb. 2 after GOP members objected to changing plans for getting back to work.
Two random reactions. First, Bush’s influence on the Hill must really be on the wane. If this were January 2004 instead of January 2006, it seems very likely the House GOP caucus would return when Bush asked them to. Now, not so much.
Second, the White House is right to worry that the House leadership election may step on the post-SOTU message, but it’s not as if Bush is really in a position to complain. After all, no one hates returning to Washington to get back to work more than the president.