The Daily - The House Republican Who Says His Party Is Mishandling the Shutdown
Episode Date: October 31, 2025Representative Kevin Kiley is one of five California Republicans who are all but certain to lose their seats in the next midterm elections if voters grant final approval to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s newly... drawn congressional districts.Mr. Kiley showed up to work in protest against Speaker Mike Johnson’s decision to send the House home indefinitely as the government shutdown drags on.A new poll from The Washington Post found that more Americans blame the shutdown on Trump and congressional Republicans than on Democrats.“The Daily” sat down with Mr. Kiley for a conversation about his one-man campaign to try to fix what he believes his party is getting wrong in this moment.Guest: Representative Kevin Kiley, Republican of California.Background reading: The lonely House Republican still coming to work during the shutdown.Photo: Haiyun Jiang/The New York TimesFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sir, can I just put a question?
Yeah.
I'm looking for what we like to call it a little subway.
Yes.
I'm trying to get to the Capitol.
I'm trying to get to the house side.
You found this was a little tricky area over here.
Hallside.
So we are starting our day here in Washington, D.C. in the Dirksen Senate office building,
which is not where we want to be.
We want to be over on the House side because we're going to interview a Republican,
interview a Republican congressman there, representative Kevin Kiley of California, who's become
very interesting in this moment, which is the government being shut down, because he's very
critical of how his party has been handling the shutdown. And at the moment, the Senate side of
the Capitol complex is pretty busy because they're actually in session. The House side is
not in session, and we're really curious what it's going to feel like over there.
Okay, the little capital subway train has arrived.
Should we go on this one?
Go on this one.
Just so you know we are recording
you unwitting participants in the podcast.
Is this a normal level?
of busyness on this train?
There's just like a shutdown
of the distance?
Sure, no.
So quiet.
After you?
Thank you.
So now we're walking through a long corridor
with the house members,
offices every few feet.
And there's just newspapers stacked up outside these offices because these lawmakers aren't here.
Okay, here we go. Kevin Kiley of California. Do we knock?
Hello.
Nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you too.
Thanks for coming back.
Hi.
How you doing?
I'm Caitlin. Nice to meet you.
You want to be in charge of audio.
Sorry.
From New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarrow.
This is the Daily.
Today, Republican Congressman Kevin Kiley on what he thinks his party is getting wrong in this moment.
And his one-man campaign to try and fix it.
It's Friday, October 31st.
So should we – let's get started.
Okay.
Congressman, I would normally say thank you for making time for us, and I mean that, but
if we're being honest, there's not a ton going on here right now in the House, but you are here
and you have been here pretty much every day since the shutdown started to make a point.
And what is that point exactly?
Well, I'd like to think it's about a little more than making a point, although it is also
about making a point, you know?
So substantively, I'm trying to just have constructive conversations with whoever's around and have had a number of those.
And there are increasingly more people here back a few weeks ago.
It was a little more lonely and it's still much quieter than when you have the usual chaos of Congress in session.
But I also am trying to say, yeah, we should be here.
And the speaker has made the decision to recess the house indefinitely.
Basically to kind of close it in a sense.
Well, yeah, exactly, because we were supposed to be in session these five weeks.
Like, the House has a schedule that is set in advance, but all of the legislative business
of the House has been canceled, and I've never seen anything like this.
Not to mention the fact that this terrible government shutdown is going on, and we're not
here to play any part in trying to find a way out of it.
Right.
In fact, those don't seem unrelated.
And so you being here, it seems like, is a kind of act of protest.
Does that feel right to you?
An act of resistance against the decision to gather out?
I think I just characterize it as practicing what I preach.
I'm like, you know, I'm saying we should be here, so I'm here.
Well, I just want to explain why we're talking to you in this moment.
You're the pretty rare Republican to express some public frustration with how your party is approaching several issues facing the country right now, including, of course, the handling of the shutdown to decision to basically close down the House.
In addition to that, you've expressed some real frustration with how Republicans are carrying out parties.
and redistricting, which impacts you pretty directly, and we'll get to that. You've expressed some
frustration over the refusal of your party's leadership to seat a newly elected member of this
body, who is a Democrat. And I think understanding all of those complaints and frustrations
that you have can, I hope, shed some real light on the way Washington works right now, or doesn't
work right now at this pretty important time. So that's why we want to talk to you. And,
And I think to have this conversation, we need to understand the perspective that you bring to those situations I just outlined and understand the district you represent.
You're a California House Republican. They do exist. I think there are nine out of 54 of the California.
There are nine now. There are actually 12 before the last election. Now we're nine to nine.
And you're elected in the first and the only midterm of the Biden presidency.
That's correct.
2022.
And at the time, it's a fairly safe Republican seat.
You get President Trump, former President Trump at the time's endorsement.
And when you win that seat, Republicans suddenly control the House.
And I wonder what you saw as your mission when you were being sworn in.
Was it to be a check on President Biden at that moment?
Is it working with him in the Democrats?
How did you see that rule?
Yeah.
And the district is really,
kind of a purple district, for lack of a better word. I mean, President Trump won it by about a
point in a half in 2020 by about three and a half points in 2024. So that has always informed my
perspective as well that I represent folks who have very different views and who care about very
different issues. And so coming in in 2023, I guess, I did see it part of my role as providing
something as a counterweight. Because, you know, in California, we have this kind of one-party state.
we have a super duper majority.
And, you know, even beyond sort of the partisan lens is just that the way that the state has been governed has veered very far in one direction.
And then you kind of had layered on top of that some of the policies of the Biden administration.
And so I said, look, where I'm able to work with the Biden administration, I will, when it's necessary to oppose them for the what's best for our district.
I'll do that too.
Got it.
And then after the 2024 election, you're reelected.
And of course, everything changes here in Washington because.
Donald Trump beats Kamala Harris, takes back the White House.
Suddenly, every branch of the government is controlled by your party,
which in theory is a dream come true for a House Republican like you.
But over time, and this is what we're going to be talking about,
you encounter some frustrations.
And I want to talk about that journey toward what feels like some level of disillusionment.
It feels now like it's taking its loudest form.
with your frustration over the shutdown,
but my sense is that it begins a little bit earlier
when House Republican leaders start making decisions around redistricting,
redrawing congressional maps.
So can you talk us through that?
I started raising concerns about this many, many months ago
when sort of the writing was on the wall,
that there was going to be this redistricting domino effect
across the country,
where one state after another would redraw their district lines
in order to advantage whatever.
party controlled the state politics in that particular state. And just to be clear,
right, this begins with President Trump asking several states, first Texas, to redraw their
House congressional maps to maximize Republican Party advantage in future House races.
So that's certainly one way to frame it. But, I mean, the reality is this has been going on
for a long time, like gerrymandering is as old as the country itself. So certainly if you ask the
people in Texas, they'd probably say, oh, we're, you know, responding to New York or some other state
that has gerrymandered their state. But I think that, you know, the logic of this, that responding
to what a prior state has done in order to sort of cancel them out, it just leads to this sort of
race to the bottom that degrades democracy everywhere. And just explain why it degrades democracy
everywhere in your mind. Yeah. So, I mean, the basic line that you sometimes hear is that voters to
choose their representatives, representatives shouldn't choose their voters. Right. And when you sort of are
moving district lines around in order to arrive at the outcome that is preferred by incumbent
politicians, then it really limits the agency of the voter to sort of choose the destiny
of their state or their polity. That's one reason. I mean, it's also just incredibly destabilizing
when you do it mid-decade. Right. Well, that's the important phrase, and I just want to make
sure listeners understand it. What's so unusual about what's happening right now is that the president
asked that House districts be redrawn outside of the normal system of waiting for the census
to tell us how many people live in a district. Like you said, it's called mid-decade redistricting.
Very unusual. And my understanding is that it literally touches off a chain of events
that start to endanger your seat. So I want to talk about, first of all, what that felt like,
but then what you asked the Republican leadership to do.
Yeah, absolutely. I said from the moment this kind of was on my radar that it shouldn't be
happening anywhere. I'm against it in Texas. I'm against it in California. It's pure political
opportunism. So I just introduced a bill, a very simple bill. It says,
back in August. Yeah, that sounds right. That says you cannot redistrict mid-decade with the very
narrow exceptions of a federal court decision under the Voting Rights Act. And so that would say
that none of these redistricting shenanigans that we're seeing in any state are allowed to
happen. It would say this is a truce, a ceasefire in the redistricting war. We could all move on with
our lives representing the districts as they were drawn at the time of the last census. And what was the
response? Because the way this works is you are a House Republican. If you want this legislation to go
anywhere, you need to bring it to the leadership. That's right. Yeah. So leadership has been unwilling to
bring it to the floor. And I have urged them to do so publicly and privately and repeatedly. And I do
believe that it is... Why? Why won't they bring it to the floor? I don't know. I've asked them to do it and
it hasn't happened. And I think that if it did come to the floor, it would have a lot of support because
I have members who tell me all the time that they think this is the right thing for them and for the
country. And I don't just mean the people whose seats are going to be in jeopardy, like the
Republicans in Texas. And I'm talking about the members of Congress from Texas. They were very much
opposed to this attempt to redistrict in Texas. They don't want to see their district suddenly
butchered or upended. Right. And to be clear, it sounds like for you, this is both a principled
position around the question of what is right and wrong when you partisan gerrymander mid-decade
and personal because your district has become the target of Governor Newsom's retaliation
to Texas's redistricting. He would like to redistrict Republican seats in
California to maximize democratic partisan advantage. And one of those seats is the third
congressional district in California. That's your seat. So through a very kind of wild series of
events, what started with President Trump ordering mid-decade congressional redistricting could
result in you being drawn out of your own district. Well, it'll certainly result in my district
being split into six different pieces or going six different directions. That doesn't sound good.
No, I don't have that at all.
I do think I can still win re-election under the gerrymandered map,
but I very much would prefer to continue to represent the beautiful third district as currently constituted.
Right.
But to put it pretty bluntly, and this is a very unusual situation,
it sounds like your party's leaders are willing to sacrifice you, in theory,
for the party's ongoing control of Congress and refusing to entertain the idea of introducing a bill that would stop that.
I don't know what their motivations are, but their inaction is frustrating, certainly.
All I'm asking for is a vote on the bill, and I think that if it came to the floor, I would pass.
Okay, so that seems like a very clear, existential even moment of building frustration for you.
And not long after that, because this has all happened in a very compressed period of time, we get the shutdown.
And you have blamed Democrats for the shutdown, and I would understand why that means.
makes some sense. They withheld their votes to approve a spending bill to protest the
health care situation in the country. And yet, once the government is shut down, you become this
voice of disapproval that Speaker Johnson and Republican leaders won't keep the House in session
during the shutdown. And I wonder if you can take us back to that moment. And what you tried to
do to make the case to them that the House should stay in session despite the shutdown?
Well, I'm not really sure it's a hard case to make, right? Like, the House is supposed to be here.
We have things to do. I don't understand why this is a particularly radical position to take.
There's no reason for the House of Representatives to close its doors.
What was the argument that was put forth by Speaker Johnson to do it in the first place?
It wasn't just done summarily, was it? Or was it?
Pretty much. I mean, we just, you know, the last vote we had was on the.
the CR. You know, I voted for the CR, even though I don't like CRs, and I think they're a bad way
to govern, continue resolution. A bill that would keep the government funded. Yeah, exactly. I mean,
I voted for it as the lesser of two evils because the government shutdown has such terrible
consequences. And I do wish that Senator Schumer would pass the CR out of the Senate. But I've also
said, look, this is politics. Sometimes you have to find a way to work with people who have a different
position than you have in order to find the common ground that's best for the country. So that's
another reason that the House ought to be here, why it's more, even more important that the House is here
during a shutdown. So that you could actually have a conversation about ending the shutdown.
And as things are, those conversations are happening mostly in the Senate, because the Senate's
actually here, attending to its ordinary business as well as trying to find to have those
conversations. I mean, in a word, what does it feel like to you to have your party's
leadership not be willing to ask you all to do your jobs during this moment?
Well, it feels like we're being deprived of the opportunity to fight for our constituents that
Well, that's not a word, but fine.
What's that?
I always joke, it's an in a word.
In a word.
That's true.
Bad?
Is that a word?
That's a word.
I think you've called it embarrassing.
I mean, you've conveyed the idea that this is just kind of beneath the institution.
I do think it's embarrassing.
Like to have the, you know, the House of Representatives is just not here.
And the serious work is not being done.
Oversight of any number of institutions.
Reviews of potential legislation.
I mean, nothing of that kinds being done.
And then there are the very, very urgent questions around the shutdown that are not being addressed.
And let's just talk about one of them, snap benefits.
This is subsidies from the federal government that allow tens of millions of Americans to feed themselves and their family.
They're going to run out.
Within the next, I think, 24 to 48 hours, we're talking to you on Thursday.
So over the weekend, I think November 1st, they're going to run out.
And the House, not in session, means you guys can't come up with them.
planned to address that. The Senate is talking about potential plans to end that. Nothing concrete
has yet come together. But if it did, you couldn't even vote on it. Yeah, exactly. I'm actually
co-sponsoring a bill that says even if the government is shut down, we should continue providing
SNAP benefits. But there's no opportunity to vote on that bill because the House isn't here.
Right. There's no session in which to introduce the resolution. I mean, let's move to the central
question of this shutdown, which is health care, right? I mean, the Democrats would
say there are a number of reasons why they shut the government down. But the primary reason
is that health care costs are going to be surging, especially towards the end of the year,
and is going to make health care inaccessible to millions and millions of Americans. So what
do you want to see your party do or not do to bring that subject any kind of resolution in
these shutdown negotiations? Because we know what the Democrats say they want. They want you all to
approve subsidies for the Affordable Care Act that will expire that are making health care
much more expensive. What do you want? If we presume for the moment that the house would ever
reopen. Right. I'm very concerned about the ACA subsidy issue. So I'm one of a number of people
on my side of the aisle, in addition to many on the other side of the aisle, who believe there
needs to be some sort of solution here. And I do believe that there's enough interest on both sides
that there's going to be a deal. What that looks like, it remains to be seen. Is it going to be
a long-term extension? Is it going to be a short-term extension? All those things would need to
be negotiated. You know, the Republican leadership has taken this view that, well, we just can't
negotiate about anything in any form when the leverage that's being held over us is a shutdown
government, which, you know, I certainly understand that perspective. But at the same time,
I do remember a couple years ago when Republicans were taking, you know, basically the opposite
position with respect to the debt ceiling, saying we're not going to pass a bill for a clean
extension of the debt ceiling unless we get policy changes along the way. And so that's another reason
why I think that we should at least be having conversations, right?
Right. It feels fair to say, correct me from wrong, that you're pretty much bewildered that
amid all these cascading crises stemming from the shutdown that seem like they're going to make
like pretty miserable for a lot of Americans, that the speaker is not bringing the house back
into session to address them. And I wonder why you think the speaker is refusing to change course.
I don't know what his real reason is, or I mean, not to say this. You can't pick up the phone?
I have talked to them, sure.
I mean, I don't want to, you know, share private conversations,
but I haven't gotten any explanation that makes sense to me.
And just to add the last one of these complaints you have,
and it's very interesting to a lot of people that Speaker Johnson will not seat a Democrat,
duly elected by her constituents, a congresswoman elect Grijalva.
She's not yet actually been sworn in.
What do you think of that?
I think it's totally unacceptable.
I mean, yeah, and in this one, I just don't understand.
Like, it's pretty basic stuff.
She won her election.
She's the duly elected member of Congress.
But you probably do on some level understand,
which is that she would give the Democrats the sufficient votes
along with four House Republicans to force a vote on a resolution
to direct the Department of Justice to release Jeffrey Epstein files.
That could be very embarrassing to the president.
Yeah, I know that's been offered as possibly the reason.
I mean, the reality is that that would be the case whenever she's sworn in.
So whether that's the reason or not, I don't know.
I just think that having someone get elected and then have to wait five plus weeks to get sworn in.
And then the rationale offered is, well, the House hasn't been in session.
Well, it's not her fault.
The House has been in session.
The House was supposed to be in session the week after that and the week after that.
And by the way, even when the House isn't in session, you can still square someone in.
I mean, the question is, are these essentially amounting to anti-democratic moves by the Speaker of the House?
It doesn't sit right with me.
I mean, I don't know exactly how...
And I don't mean anti-capital D democratic.
I mean, the democracy.
You said it doesn't sit well with you.
Yeah.
I mean, and maybe it just is part of it
is my perspective being like on the other side of this
in California for six years as a member of the legislature.
But I think we ought to have norms and rules in the House
that apply regardless of the situation.
I mean, just to bring this all together,
I mean, these are your complaints.
They're very clear.
And I think we now need to talk about the role that you, and arguably many of your House Republican colleagues, may have played in creating the circumstances that you now object to.
And you may object to me saying that, but I'd like to talk about that right after we take a short break.
We'll be right back.
So, Congressman, there are two pieces of legislation.
As you know, that Democrats see as central to their case for shutting down the government and keeping it closed.
You voted for both of them.
Let me just explain.
The first one is the president's domestic policy bill, what he calls the one big, beautiful bill,
which besides extending his tax.
cuts, changes the requirements for Medicaid, the rules, the work requirements in ways that will
result in millions of people losing their health care through Medicaid. And on top of
expiring subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, the argument from Democrats is that this is going to
be financially ruinous to people's relationship to health care. Because you voted for that
bill, I want to understand whether you see yourself as being a little bit responsible for
one of the kind of tent poll reasons why Democrats are now saying they've shut the government down,
which is that they think it's just basically intolerable to have health care being accessible to this
many Americans. So that's not really what they're making it about at this point, though. I know that
Senator Schumer threw that out there initially is one of the things he wanted to change,
but the idea of sort of unraveling a bill that was just passed was never, you know, going to be
a viable negotiating position. So at this point, they've really just winnowed it down to the
ACA subsidy issue. You're trying to say that you don't think the one big beautiful bills
cuts to Medicaid are really motivating for the shutdown? Well, that's not even what they're
sort of asking for at this point is altering that. I mean, obviously, they're still talking about it,
but really the focus has been on the ACA subsidies, which were created several years ago in the COVID
years. And, you know, incidentally, when it comes to HR1 or the Big Beautiful Bill, whatever it's
called these days, what was initially proposed were truly significant cuts to Medicaid across
the country, which I was very much against. At the end of the day, not a perfect bill. It's a massive
piece of legislation. Those were largely paired down to things like work requirements that I actually
think make a lot of sense, saying that if you're going to get access to taxpayer-funded health care,
you should at least be looking for a job or working or volunteering 20 hours per week. So I don't think
that, and the fact that that's not even what they're asking for right now, I don't think you can
necessarily, you know, tie the two together. The only pushback I want to offer here is I believe
estimates from independent groups and our colleagues at the times who have been looking into this is that
those work requirements, which many people may agree with, will lead to millions, I think as many
as 12 million people losing their health care through Medicaid. So I think when the Democrats have
talked about a health care crisis that they want Republicans to help them address, that does
feel kind of in a role. Well, again, look at what they're asking for. So initially, yes,
humor did come out and say, like, when the government shut down, we want everything in
HR 1 reverse pretty much, which, you know, was not a negotiating position that was ever going to go
anywhere. But now they've said, let's make it about the ACA subsidy issue. And I think that's a little
more reasonable ground to stand on in the sense that there's a lot of interest in both sides of
the aisle on extending these subsidies, which are significantly. Like, if those go away suddenly
with just this cliff, then you're talking about millions of people who are going to be paying
a lot more for health care. Okay. So you'd prefer to meet Democrats halfway on the subsidies, not
the Medicaid. I want to turn to the second piece of legislation.
the Democrats cite, which is the rescissions bill.
And with that legislation, which you also voted for, Republicans approved a request from
the president to claw back $9 billion in money that Congress had previously approved
in a bipartisan way.
And that was money for things like foreign aid, public broadcasting corporation.
And what the Democrats say in shutting down the government is we can't trust our Republican
colleagues anymore because anything we agree to, whether it's on health care or anything
else, we don't know that they're not going to go back at the behest of the president
and let him become the appropriator, not Congress, order House Republicans and Senate
Republicans to just reverse everything that was already agreed to. That's what they think
happened with the rescission bill. So do you understand that worry from Democrats and how that
motivated to the shutdown? And if you do, why did you vote for the rescissions? Yeah, so I think
this is actually the most maybe sympathetic part of their argument because here's the dynamic that we're
working with, right? So the reason that you can't just pass a party line bill to keep the government
open is because of the filibuster rule in the Senate, right? You need to have 60 votes in the Senate to pass
it. So what's happening right now is that you don't have enough Democrats who are joining with
Republicans to pass their version of the CR. You don't have enough Republicans that are joining
with Democrats to pass their version of the CR. So spending bills by their very nature have to be
bipartisan, whereas rescission's bills, which, you know, can be sent to Congress with specific
request for the executive branch to undo appropriations that were made, those don't have the
supermajority requirement. They can be done in a strictly party-line way. So if the position of the
Democrat leaders right now is, well, we need to have some assurances that what is being done in a
bipartisan way isn't going to be undone in a party-line vote, then I don't think that's a
necessarily unreasonable position. It's not an unreasonable. It's not an unreasonable. So in other words,
it is a reason. So then why did you vote for the rescission? Well, those are totally separate
questions, right? How so? Because you can believe that a particular rescission is actually a good
thing, well, also sort of understanding the view that one side wants to be able to have a say in
rescissions when they have a say in making the appropriations in the first place. Okay, and I just want
to make sure I understand, because I'm not entirely clear on how you can hold both of those
positions at the same time. If rescissions fundamentally undermine the process of bipartisan
agreement on spending in a principled way that seems problematic, which you're suggesting, then how
can you ever be okay with doing that? Well, you can imagine a bipartisan rescission, right? So let's say that
from the beginning, this wasn't that, right? Yeah, in that particular instance, it wasn't. But that doesn't
mean that you can't have it, right? So let's say... But why not wait to vote for the one that is
bipartisan? Here I am attempting to hold you a little bit accountable for what you did.
Sure, sure. No, I understand that. But I mean, and to be clear, I think that the recisions bill that
did pass was not the ideal version of what the recisions bill should look like. I mean, is it fair to
Assume that there's a meaningful amount of pressure that you may have felt to vote for a rescission's bill, that if I'm hearing you correctly on principle, you don't really like all that much.
No, I mean, I think there were good things about that rescission's bill as well. And again,
rescissions are a legal process. Like, it's a power that the House has. And so at that point in time,
we had the ability to pull back spending that was viewed as not good or not necessary in a simple majority threshold.
But it's perfectly reasonable to then say if you're the party that was on the other end of that, all right, well, we also have the ability to hold up a future spending bill until we get assurances as to how those situations are going to be handled in the future.
Which is what Democrats are doing right now.
They're saying, how can we trust that this won't happen again?
I mean, the reason I'm asking you these questions,
and perhaps you've intuitive it,
is because so far I'm getting from you frustration around
how the shutdown has been overseen by the leaders of your party.
And, of course, that's Speaker Johnson, his deputies,
for not calling the House back into session.
But I'm trying to also understand if you feel that the votes you've taken
create any personal responsibility for the circumstances
that led to the shutdown.
that deficit of trust that the Democrats feel around rescissions, as well as the changes to the
health care system in the country. I mean, can you see that argument? I mean, I could certainly
understand, you know, that given what has happened so far this year, from the perspective of someone
like Hakeem Jeffries or Chuck Schumer, they want to use whatever tools they have available
in order to be able to have more of a say in policy going forward. So, you know, I understand
that position as far as it concerns the rescissions. And, you know, I think as well, the ACA subsidy
issue is an important one. But we at the same time need to recognize that, like, a government
shutdown is having terrible, terrible consequences for the country. And so the reality of folks
not getting their SNAP benefits of a million plus workers, other being furloughed, or not
getting paychecked, air traffic controllers, you know, not able to keep the plane schedule running
on time and everything else that comes with that. So we need to kind of keep ourselves grounded
in that reality, right? There are people that are really suffering right now. I have a related
question about redistricting. You expressed dismay that
But the Speaker didn't take up your proposed bill to ban mid-decade redistricting,
which you've described as a threat to democracy.
But I do want to push you on the idea that that redistricting, and I did this a little bit earlier,
didn't come at the behest of Speaker Johnson, came at the behest of President Trump,
the mid-decade redistricting.
Are you upset with the President for ordering that in the first place?
And if you are, why not criticize the President for initiating it?
Well, because this concerns the House of Representatives.
So, I mean, the Speaker is the leader of the House.
Sure does.
He's the representative of our conference.
And, you know, I feel like if he had taken a strong position on this, then we wouldn't
be where we are right now.
And so, you know, the president.
But isn't that, like, kind of two steps down the process of being willing to take up a law
to prevent something that the commander in chief of the president?
I mean, he didn't even just do a lot.
He could have taken the public position or advocated more strongly in conversations with the White House.
You wanted the House Speaker to say no to the president.
which is not something he really does.
I mean, I think that the Speaker of the House is the representative of the legislative branch.
So when it comes to things that specifically concern the legislative branch, obviously the speaker needs to be and will want to be in alignment with the President on policy, but when it comes to the House is an institution, he's the leader of the House is an institution.
So he's the one that I really hold accountable for protecting the House of the institution and representing our members.
I mean, I think you're probably getting at my larger curiosity here, which is in showing up every day during the shutdown,
and saying that what's happening right now,
the House not being a session,
in saying that that's wrong,
are you fighting the right battle in this moment,
or are you missing the larger fight,
which is what the President has done to Congress,
to House Republicans like you in particular,
and what he's asked you all to become in this era,
which many would regard as,
and please interrupt me if you disagree,
so far, a kind of rubber stamp for his agenda on things like health care, on things like
Medicaid, on redrawing congressional maps whenever he wants, and so on.
So in a very definite sense, what every president in recent memory has tried to exert as much
influence as they can over Congress, right? This is, I don't think that's even debatable.
That's the entire reason they have an office of legislative affairs in the White House that has a lot of
people. And that's constantly over on our side of Washington. But no one has done it with the
skill of Donald Trump. Well, sure. It's the job of the House to work with the White House to
advance the values and the agenda that we share, but also to maintain the integrity of the House
in Article 1 as an institution. Do you think that's being maintained? I've heard some very
knowledgeable people say, and perhaps it's somewhat in jest, that Congress is over right now. Maybe that's
an extraordinary overstatement, but do you worry that Congress's place in this dynamic under this
president, under the speaker, is taking you closer to a relevance that is at all required?
I think that's hyperbolic. I mean, the whole reason we have a shutdown is that Congress has not
funded the government, right? And so... That's relevance. Right? That's relevance in kind of like a bad way,
right? But from the Democrats. Like, what makes
House Republicans and congressional Republicans relevant in this moment.
I'm just saying this is a clear example of how, you know, the power of the purse lies with
the House. The House has failed to act. So that's just kind of the separation of powers at work.
But, I mean, the bigger issue is that the House itself hasn't shown up. And so that's not something
that, you know, has been a decision of the White House. It's not something that's been a
decision of Chuck Schumer, the Democrats over in the Senate. It's a decision that's been made
by the Speaker of the House and our own leadership.
And that's why I've been focusing on our own leadership
and trying to encourage them to do the right thing
and bring us back.
And I'm not the only one.
There are a number of others who have spoken up.
And I think that's actually a majority opinion
among our conference at this point.
I mean, does that ultimately and inevitably lead to questions
about whether this speaker should be speaker
if the majority of the conference does not like what is happening here?
I don't think now is the time to raise those questions.
I mean, certainly it can't be acted upon because
Right, exactly. So someone asked me the other day, oh, are you going to, you know, vote to vacate the speaker? No, of course I'm not going to do that. And for a number of reasons, but in particular, like when you vacate the speaker, literally the house shuts down. So that's not a good remedy for the house not being here is to do something that by definition shuts the house down. And we actually dealt with that when McCarthy was vacated. The house literally shut down for, I think it was three weeks then.
right while you're re-electing somebody else.
I mean, forgive me, but it does sound like you and others feel to a degree that the
speaker is abdicating the role of Congress.
I mean, just to put that very clearly.
I don't know that I'd use that word.
That's a pretty loaded term.
Sure. But I'd say that certainly not having Congress in session for five weeks that we
were supposed to be here, or the House, I should say, has made it so the House has not
been particularly relevant in terms of the path out of the shutdown has resulted in
members of the House not being able to represent our districts and the way that we were elected
to do. And just saying we passed the CR, we're going home, we're not going to come back,
has made it a lot more difficult for us to talk about any of these issues. It seems like you're
trying to make your voice clearly very heard by being here. You've done several interviews
with other journalists, including some of my colleagues at the times. And yet, I wonder if you
think it's working? The shutdown's still underway, and you being here, understandably, hasn't
altered that situation single-handedly. And it makes me think about this question of kind of what is the
place of Congress right now? What's the place of the House under Republican control? If showing up
for work is what amounts at this moment to a demonstration of independence, of resistance,
of protests. Does that read as empowering? Or is it instead a demonstration of congressional
powerlessness? Well, so, yeah, I was under no illusions that coming back, I was going to
single-handedly end everything immediately. But I think that it has perhaps encouraged others to
come back as well. And we see more people around now. We've seen more people speak out. And so
hopefully this results in the House coming back soon. Pressure to reopen. Yeah, exactly.
So I have a final question for you.
What happens to you if, as we suspect, your seat is redrawn, the third congressional district in California, to the benefit of the Democrats, and you run, and the chemistry and alchemy of that new district just is not going to get you over the line.
Your time here comes to an end.
I mean, how are you going to feel?
Because as we established at the beginning of this conversation, you did your best to ask your own party.
to do what you thought was the right thing,
and the democratic thing, small de-democratic thing,
to stop this mid-decade redistricting,
and they're ignoring you.
And the president, in some sense, is ignoring you.
And, you know, will you have been basically sacrificed
by your own party?
I mean, that seems to me like creating a prospective excuse.
So if the gerrymander goes through,
I'm confident that I can win re-election under the due map
because in the last election in 2022,
I got the second most crossover votes of any competitive district in the country.
President Trump won my district by about three and a half points.
I want to buy about 11 points with cross-over votes.
I mean, folks who voted for Kamala for president,
but voted for me for a member of the House.
And that's because I focused on issues that don't have a particularly partisan valence
that just matter to the quality of life for the folks that I represent.
And so I'm confident that whatever the map looks like,
I'll have a strong path to re-election.
Do you think this whole process of everything we're talking about
and the positions you're taking in the public way that you're willing to challenge
the leader of your own party,
inevitably just makes you a more appealing candidate to a redrawn district,
a less red district.
I think that what I'm doing now is simply fulfilling the promises that I ran on,
which is that I'm going to be an independent voice for my district,
which, you know, is the third district as it's currently constituted.
And compared to most House Republicans, you do sound quite independent.
Yeah, and I think that honestly, like, this is all,
maybe this is the better answer to your question.
Sure.
I think this has all sort of served to underline the extent to which excessive partisanship is one of the most serious problems facing the country.
So if you look at redistricting, like this is now we're talking about bringing partisanship into actually the rules of the game itself, right, to like an even deeper structural level of our politics.
Or you'll get the government shutdown.
This is where Congress can not even do its most basic job.
And you wonder why Congress has like a 13% approval rating on the part of the point.
topic, right? And so I think if you ask just about anyone, do you think partisanship is a big
problem in the country right now? Almost everyone would say, it's like the one thing that people
can't agree on, right, is that partisanship has just reached peak levels. And I think that these
two episodes have really served to emphasize that. I do think that the redistricting in the shutdown.
And, you know, as I said, trying to overcome that partisan divide was a big part of my message
when I first ran. I think that's an even more urgent message now. Right. That's why there would be
a little bit of an irony if you end up getting squeezed out of the situation.
People don't like partisanship. You tried to fight partisanship. You fail. You lose.
Well, I don't think that's going to happen.
We will see. Well, Congressman, really appreciate your time.
Of course. Nice for having me. Cheers.
On Thursday afternoon, after we spoke with Representative Kylie,
a federal judge expressed frustration with the Trump administration
over its refusal to fund the SNAP food benefit program for the poor during the shutdown.
The White House told the judge that it could not tap into billions of dollars
specifically reserved for the SNAP program,
a claim that the judge said was hard to accept.
At the same time, a new poll from the Washington Post found that more Americans
now blame the shutdown on President Trump and congressional Republicans, then on Democrats.
33% blame Democrats, while 45% blame Republicans.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
But overall, I guess on the scale from zero to zero.
10, with 10 being the best, I would say the meeting was a 12.
I think it was the 12th.
On Thursday, after a high-stakes meeting with the leader of China, President Trump said that
the two countries have de-escalated their trade war, agreeing to what amounts to a year-long
ceasefire that would roll back tariffs, as well as a shutoff of access to rare earth metals.
The deal will lower the average tariff rate on many Chinese imports into the U.S.
U.S., from around 57% to 47%, but the tariffs will remain historically high.
And just days before the election for New York City mayor, two new polls released on Thursday
showed that Zoran Mamdani, a Democratic socialist, holds a wide lead over his two rivals.
One of the polls showed Mamdani with a 16-point lead, the other with a nearly 25-point lead,
But in a new video to his supporters,
Mamdani cautioned them against complacency.
People say we got this. It's over.
Cuomo is cooked.
Do not believe it.
Take nothing for granted.
Today's episode was produced by Kaelin O'Keefe, Michael Simon Johnson, and Ostervedi.
It was edited by Rachel Quester and Liz O'Beylon.
contains music by Dan Powell and Marion Lazzano, and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the daily. I'm Michael Bobarro. See you on Monday.
