'His days are numbered': GOP lawmakers hoping one of their own is purged by voters
U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio, offers remarks on the introduction of the HIRE Act outside of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Tuesday, July 18, 2023. Rod Lamkey via REUTERS

House Republican leadership is deliberately refraining from forcing out scandal-plagued Rep. Tony Gonzalez (R-TX), hoping instead that primary voters in his district will do their dirty work for them with a primary loss, sparing them losing his seat in the general election.

Gonzalez has resisted calls to resign despite facing accusations that his sexual harassment of staffer Regina Santos-Aviles drove her to suicide. Republicans have largely remained silent, primarily because their razor-thin House majority cannot afford to lose a single member.

Instead of pushing him out, party leaders are betting that Gonzalez will lose his primary race, allowing them to retain his vote until a Republican successor can presumably hold the seat in November.

According to Politico, neither President Donald Trump nor Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) have withdrawn their endorsements of Gonzalez, which were issued months earlier. However, a growing number of House Republicans are privately pinning their hopes that he loses the primary, according to interviews with more than a dozen lawmakers and aides granted anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.

Rep. Mike Haridopolos (R-FL) openly expressed the sentiment, stating, "Should he lose the primary, which a lot of us expect him to do, he'll probably just serve out his term. People still deserve to have a congressman doing the constituent work, et cetera."

Haridopolos, like other House Republicans, characterized the allegations against Gonzalez as "very serious, to say the least," adding: "I think the voters in Texas are going to speak pretty loudly. And I would guess that his days are numbered in Congress."

The situation has created enormous complications for Speaker Johnson, who is already managing a precarious majority. Assembling sufficient Republican votes to advance legislation requires near-perfect party discipline. The GOP can afford no more than one defection on party-line votes when all members are present, making controversial legislation a constant political tightrope.

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