The relationship between Republican Party representatives in the House and Senate has never been worse, according to various insiders.
Unnamed GOP lawmakers from both the House and Senate made their thoughts clear on the divisions currently undermining the party. A fix for the Department of Homeland Security freeze pitched by the Senate was trashed by the House, with a boiling point reached, according to NOTUS. Insiders say the divide has only worsened over the last few months, with reps from the upper and lower chambers making clear their thoughts on the tension.
An anonymous House Republican said, "The Senate clearly, like transparently, has zero respect for the House at all. There’s this idea that they are far superior to us intellectually, that they understand issues better than we do. The Senate sees the House as a bunch of sort of barbarians or Philistines, and they’re the enlightened ones."
A separate, senior GOP aide added, "The Senate is still acting like the Senate, which is why the House hates it. It’s sort of ignoring the House’s plight. I think leadership’s trying to be sensitive to that, but members aren’t.
"Even if the relationships are not at an all-time low, the functioning is at an all-time low." Even House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune reportedly do not "respect or trust" one another.
Johnson's aide alleged there was no battle between House and Senate at the moment, and that the GOP is focused solely on pushing through potential divisions.
"Johnson has consistently emphasized the importance of House and Senate Republicans working closely together as one team, and he has worked hard to ensure it," the unnamed senior aide said.
"That cooperation and trust have been the reasons for the landmark achievements of the 119th Congress, in spite of our historically small margins. The stakes are too high to allow any division to develop now."


