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  1. House Speaker Mike Johnson wants to make it harder for members of Congress to defy leadership after members of his own caucus turned on him to force a House vote on the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.

    Despite months of opposition, Johnson is saying he wants to “see a higher threshold” for privileged motions and discharge petitions, he told Axios.

    Discharge petitions have long been seen as a Hail Mary; since 1935, just 42 of 673 petitions have received the necessary 218 signatures, according to Axios. Only seven discharge petitions, less than 1 percent of the total, have led to legislation ultimately being signed into law.

    Read the full story, [here](https://www.thedailybeast.com/mike-johnson-plots-major-rule-change-after-his-jeffrey-epstein-humiliation/).

  2. CogentCogitations on

    We can’t have these bills passing that only 99.8% of Representatives and Senators support.

  3. VladtheInhaler999 on

    When the Dungeon master has a bitch fit mid game even though I’m just using the rules he set

  4. The house speaker has more power to block legislation than the president’s veto power. And he wants more.

  5. Every day is a new opportunity for Mike Johnson to show just how weak and small he actually is

  6. Unique-Coffee5087 on

    Remember all the drama and chaos that preceded Mike Johnson becoming Speaker of the House? I kind of recall that there were concessions that he had to agree to in order to secure enough votes. One of those was that any Republican could call for the speakership to change at any time. Or something like that. I do not remember the exact wording, but it was something like this.

    Maybe he has a better hold on the position right now, and is no longer a subject to this rule, but I am genuinely surprised that they have retained him.

    Edit: okay, it looks like that rule was changed.

    >The House voted mostly along party lines Friday to adopt a rules package that protects newly reelected Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) from a potential ouster.

    >Why it matters: The new rules make it so that a vote on removing the speaker can only be brought if at least nine Republicans support what is called a “motion to vacate.”

    >That is a significantly higher bar than in the 118th Congress when any single member in either party could force such a motion.

    >The tool was used to remove former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) in October 2023. Johnson faced an unsuccessful ouster attempt in April.

    https://www.axios.com/2025/01/03/mike-johnson-motion-to-vacate-new-rule-passed

  7. Total-Mushroom-9614 on

    This is why the government needs a redo. Much like law…it has distilled down to a game of. Oh…I see how you won….lemme change the rules real fast.

    These are the whiniest, weakest, worst people we all met on Elementary school playgrounds who played cards with their mom at home and never lost. (because mom didnt wanna upset baby)

  8. I hate when I vote for stuff and then it actually happens. Oh wait, never mind, I’m not an idiot or Trump voter so I actually vote for what I want to happen and people I find to be somewhat competent.

  9. He really is a sad pile of excrement.. When asked about Trump’s death threats, he said attorneys would have to “parse” the language in the criminal act.

    Dude, you’re a constitutional lawyer. Stop weaseling out of every reporter question thrown out to you that doesn’t fit your fake narrative.

  10. Fascist little Trump butt licker. Majority rules is no longer satisfactory to the leader of the co-equal branch of government that yielded his one-third to the pedo President

  11. He wants it harder for people to vote based off what their constituents wants and needs are instead of party politics. Asshat

  12. TinyGreenTurtles on

    We need to get Trump, Vance, and Johnson all out of there. Try them for treason we have a million reasons.

  13. guyincognito121 on

    It’s ridiculous that we’ve allowed there to be a system in which rules with no basis in law can prevent a bill from being voted on even if it would easily pass. This isn’t specific to Mike Johnson; it’s been a problem for a long time and he just appears to be trying to make it worse.

  14. Every time an R loses, they want to change the procedure, not their policy position.

    “If conservatives become convinced they cannot win democratically, they will not abandon conservatism. They will reject democracy”

    -David Frum

  15. This is getting to a point where it’s pointless. About the only option we have at this point is to have a revolution and get all these f*ckers to start playing by our rules. The alternative just bow out and take it like a bunch of f*cking pussies. You know … keep voting on a rigged two party system, maybe hope the billionaires throw us a few more dollars an hour and some scraps from their pile of accumulating wealth all while dying of completely curable problems that the healthcare industry decided that we can’t access. This is a serious problem because they’ve shown us that voting, protesting and playing by the rules doesn’t seem to work. I don’t want to incite violence, but that seems to be the only thing that’s getting a reaction.

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