With less than six months until the November election, some Republicans in Congress are trying to distance themselves from their more extreme members.
But there’s only so much they can do with Donald Trump at the top of the ticket.
The dissonance was on display this week as Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene mounted a kamikaze mission to remove rookie House Speaker Mike Johnson.
As Greene rose to speak on Wednesday, some Republicans heckled and booed her.
As Greene rose to speak on Wednesday, some Republicans heckled and booed her, and an overwhelming majority made up of Republicans and Democrats voted to table her motion to vacate the speaker’s chair. At an impromptu news conference, a group of self-described “mainstream Republicans” sought to distance themselves from the shenanigans.
“You can be productive, or you can be destructive,” said South Dakota Rep. Dusty Johnson. “Ms. Taylor Greene is choosing destructive.”
New York Rep. Mike Lawler was more succinct: “Moscow Marjorie has clearly gone off the deep end.”
Even as the House was rejecting Greene’s fools-errand resolution, there were other signs this week of Republicans trying to reclaim a party that has gone off the rails since 2015.
One hint came on Tuesday in Indiana, where former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley won nearly 22% of the vote in the Republican presidential primary despite having dropped out — and pretty much disappeared from the public eye — more than two months ago. In the battleground of Pennsylvania last month, Haley won nearly 17% of the vote — earning more votes than Joe Biden’s margin of victory in the state in 2020.
In all, Haley has earned more than a million votes in various Republican primaries since exiting the race. That’s not because she’s a particularly compelling candidate, but because a good number of Republicans are frustrated with the direction of the party.








