Friday, April 04, 2025
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Two Wrongs Shouldn’t Mean No Votes



First, let me say this. I like Anna Paulina Luna. She is an Air Force veteran and has served as the U.S. representative for Florida’s 13th congressional district since 2023. She’s a member of the Republican Party and is the first Mexican American woman elected to Congress from Florida. 

However, she may have overstepped Tuesday evening when she decided to jam the issue of proxy voting for new mothers onto the congressional floor. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) opposed the resolution proposed by Luna. However, eight other Republicans supported her initiative on Tuesday to continue the effort to pass the bill.

A total of 222 members voted in favor of the bill, while 206 opposed it. Luna collaborated with Rep. Brittany Pettersen (D-Colo.), who brought her baby to the House floor on Tuesday. Together, they successfully gathered enough signatures to push the issue forward using a discharge petition.

A discharge petition is a procedural tool that allows lawmakers to circumvent leadership and bring a bill to the House floor, provided it gains signatures from a majority of members.

Luna posted:

“This was a modest, family-centered proposal. Yet, a small group among us threatened the Speaker, vowing to halt floor proceedings indefinitely, regardless of the legislation at stake, including President Trump’s agenda, unless he altered the rules to block my discharge petition.”

She noted that the rule change would have affected fewer than 14 mothers in congressional history, but some Republicans compelled Johnson to associate the SAVE Act with a motion to defeat her proposal.

Luna viewed this as an attempt to coerce enough opposition to oppose her resolution. After learning of the effort, she announced her departure from the House Freedom Caucus.

The fallout was immediate after the nine Republicans joined the 213 Democrats, causing the rule vote to fail. This derailed bills such as the SAVE Act and measures aimed at reigning in activist judges who target Trump. An aggravated Johnson then decided to halt proceedings and send lawmakers home until Monday.

This prompted Luna to say:

“The intent was clear: to misrepresent me and the members supporting this pro-life, pro-family initiative — one of the most significant in congressional history — as obstructing the President and opposing election integrity. This tactic was not just a betrayal of trust; it was a descent into the very behavior we have long condemned — a practice that we, as a group, have repeatedly criticized leadership for allowing.”

Johnson then responded:

“That rule being brought down means that we can’t have any further action on the floor this week.”

“That means we will not be voting on the SAVE Act for election integrity. We will not be voting on the rogue judges who are attacking President Trump’s agenda. We will not be taking down these terrible Biden policies with the CRA votes. All that was just wiped off the table.”

“It’s very unfortunate,” Johnson concluded.

He then posted the same thoughts on X, writing:

“A handful of Republicans just joined every House Democrat to take down a rule. This means we can’t take any further action on President Trump’s agenda this week: No SAVE Act. No vote to address rogue judges attacking Trump. No votes to repeal Biden regulations.”

However, that is only the case because he permitted it to be.

According to experts on congressional procedure and recent reports, Johnson has the authority to introduce a new rule, resume floor action, and prioritize the Republican agenda immediately. Instead, Johnson’s bruised ego led him to take his ball and send everyone home.

Jake Sherman of Punchbowl News pointed out that fact posting:

“This is a choice, of course. They can bring up the SAVE Act at any time without a rule. They can go back to rules. It’s only Tuesday!! But they’re done for the week after @realannapaulina beat @SpeakerJohnson on that rule vote over proxy voting for parents.”

Johnson’s decision to recess now, with only four legislative days scheduled for next week and a two-week vacation approaching, is justifiably being criticized as political malpractice.

This situation exemplifies how two wrongs do not make a right, and in this case, it has delayed serious legislation without a reasonable explanation.

At first glance, Luna’s bill seems commendable, but she herself acknowledged that it will only affect a very small number of people. So, why insist on pursuing something that most Americans can’t relate to? Congress doesn’t typically work that hard, and stirring up such controversy over a temporary issue is simply ridiculous.

On the other hand, Johnson should not take situations like this so personally that they interfere with the important work Congress is supposed to accomplish. Both Luna and Johnson acted immaturely, and this is unfair to the American people.

Popular conservative commentator “Catturd” made his thoughts very clear:

“Another week of Republicans caving to Democrats and Republicans in Congress getting nothing done to help Trump for another week is all that happened here. Another week of rogue judges destroying the MAGA agenda. The Republican Congress has done exactly ZERO to even pass one of Trump’s executive orders into law, while Trump works 100-hour weeks. Enjoy another week off.”

Republicans need to stop being distracted and focus solely on Trump’s agenda. That’s the only way to undo the Democratic damage that was inflicted on our country over 12 of the last 16 years.