Payroll tax fight: Has Boehner lost control of the GOP?

The House speaker rejects the Senate's bipartisan tax deal after members of his caucus revolt. Just who's calling the shots in the House?

House Speaker John Boehner's caucus rejected the Senate's two-month extension of the payroll tax break: Without congressional action, taxes on working Americans will climb two percentage poin
(Image credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Republican John Boehner is ending his first year as House speaker with a high-stakes political gamble: On Tuesday, his caucus rejected a Senate bill to extend a popular payroll tax break for two months. Instead, House Republicans insisted that the recessed Senate — which passed the temporary extension 89-10 — come back to Washington to square its bill with the House's plan, which extends the tax break for a year, but also makes spending cut demands that Democrats strongly oppose. The Senate is holding firm, and Senate Republicans are livid. Indeed, Boehner appeared to support the bipartisan Senate deal before his unruly caucus balked. Now, the House speaker is flunking his "last and biggest political test of a wild year," say Jonathan Allen and Seung Min Kim at Politico. "Has John Boehner lost control?"

Yes. "Radical backbenchers" are calling the shots: This obvious cave to Tea Party freshmen proves Boehner is "less a leader of his caucus than a servant of his radical backbenchers," says Dana Milbank in The Washington Post. Instead of victories, these "sophomoric" freshmen have delivered Boehner "a string of insults." In fact, the Tea Partiers have become so "tipsy with power" that maybe Boehner should give up his speaker's gavel and admit what he truly is: "Their barkeep."

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