US House conservatives revolt against leadership, block gas stove bill
A SMALL group of Republicans in the House of Representatives on Tuesday stopped their leaders’ drive to protect gas-fueled stoves from regulation, raising questions about the party’s ability to advance other legislation this year.
The revolt had nothing to do with the kitchen appliances, stemming instead from lingering bitterness over a deal to raise the US debt ceiling.
In a surprise move, roughly a dozen conservatives sided with Democrats in a 220-206 vote that prevented the House from taking up a gas-stove bill backed by Republican leadership.
The effort underscored the ability of a handful of conservatives to challenge the leadership of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who presides over a narrow Republican majority.
McCarthy retreated to his office to try to convince the rebels to let that legislation go forward.
Some state and local governments have begun prohibiting gas-fueled furnaces, water heaters and stoves in new buildings as a way of reducing fossil-fuel emissions contributing to climate change.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The Republican bill, if passed by the House, could have faced resistance in the Democratic-controlled Senate.
One of the conservative House Republicans who voted “no”, Representative Ralph Norman, accused McCarthy of a “bait and switch” in his negotiations to raise the debt ceiling with Democratic President Joe Biden.
Norman and other far-right Republicans had pushed for far deeper spending cuts than the US$1.3 trillion that were enacted into law.
Others said they were angry over McCarthy’s handling of an unrelated bill designed to roll back new federal restrictions on certain pistols. “We’re not going to live in the era of the imperial speaker anymore,” said Republican Representative Matt Gaetz.
The House had been scheduled on Tuesday to vote on a bill that would prohibit the US Consumer Product Safety Commission from declaring gas stoves to be hazardous or otherwise restrict their sale.
Another bill, scheduled for a Wednesday vote, would restrict energy conservation standards and block the Department of Energy from issuing rules that would raise the price of gas stoves or force them off the market.
Throughout this summer, McCarthy will be responsible for passing spending bills through the House ahead of the Oct 1 start of the new fiscal year.
Failure to do so could lead to the risk of a partial government shutdown, as has happened several times over the past decade. REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
US airlines forecast record 2024 summer travel, up 6.3% over last year
German economic advisors to cut 2024 growth forecast
Easing eurozone inflation creates room for rate cuts: ECB’s Knot
Powell reiterates Fed likely to keep rates higher for longer
Britain and US sound alarm over growing Chinese cyber threat
US producer prices increase more than expected in April