The punishment came on a day when King was denounced by an array of Republican leaders, though not President Donald Trump. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., suggested King find “another line of work” and Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah said he should quit. And the House Republicans, in an attempt to be proactive, stripped him of the committee seats in the face of multiple Democratic resolutions to censure or formally disapprove of King introduced Monday.
Those measures would force Republicans to take a stand on the House Democratic majority’s attempt to publicly reprimand one of their own, though Democrats were divided on which one to back. Censure, should Democrats pursue it, is the House’s most extreme rebuke shy of expulsion and has been rarely used.
King, who has been an ally of Trump on the border wall and other issues, has a long history of making racist remarks and insults about immigrants, but has not drawn rebukes from Republican leaders until recently. In November, top Iowa Republicans like Sen. Chuck Grassley endorsed King for re-election even after one House Republican official came out and denounced him as a white supremacist.
The broad condemnation of King now underway stems from his comments in an interview with The Times published last week. In the article, King said: “White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive?”
Speaking to reporters Monday night after the House Republican leadership team acted, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., the minority leader, said he was not ruling out supporting a censure or reprimand resolution against King. He said the Republicans are not removing King from the GOP House conference itself, so he can still attend its party meetings, and it was up to Iowans whether King should stay in office.
“This is not the first time we’ve heard these comments,” McCarthy said of King, an acknowledgment of the racist language the congressman has used before. “That is not the party of Lincoln and it’s definitely not American.”
McCarthy, who conferred privately with King for an hour before the vote, did not say why the most recent comments were a breaking point given King’s long public record of similar remarks. “Maybe I did not see those, but I disagree with these.”
King remained defiant after losing his committee seats, releasing a long statement insisting that his comments in the Times article had been misunderstood. He had been referring only to “western civilization” when he asked “how did that language become offensive,” not “white nationalist” or “white supremacist.”
“Leader McCarthy’s decision to remove me from committees is a political decision that ignores the truth,” he said.
He pledged to continue to “point out the truth” and serve his district for “at least the next two years.”
The scramble to condemn King also illustrated how alarmed senior Republicans are about the party’s image just two months after they lost 40 House seats, most of them in suburban or diverse districts — including seven in McCarthy’s home state of California, where the GOP is on the brink of extinction.
The condemnations of King stood in stark contrast to the lawmakers’ willingness to tolerate Trump’s offensive and insensitive remarks about migrants, black people, Native Americans and other minorities.
Just last week, the president used the Oval Office to unleash a blistering assault on unauthorized immigrants, portraying them as criminals in a fashion that harkened back to an earlier era of American politics but rarely heard from a president in modern times. And on Sunday night, Trump invoked the Wounded Knee massacre of hundreds of Native Americans as an attempt to joke about Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.
“I’m glad that they are finally taking action after all of these years of Steve King slandering immigrants and Hispanics, but the president of the United States is also doing that and he just said something about Elizabeth Warren a few evenings ago that was also racially ugly and we haven’t heard a word of condemnation from anyone in the Republican Party about that,” said Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas.
Congressional Republicans have continued to embrace the president and his hard-line immigration politics, averting their gaze from his inflammatory rhetoric out of fear their core voters will punish them if they stray from Trump.
The president, when asked by reporters Monday about King’s remarks, said, “I haven’t been following it.”
Republicans are now trying to get ahead of a fast-moving political problem while the country is in the midst of a lengthy government shutdown over a border wall by Trump, who in many ways patterned his immigration policies and rhetoric on those of King.
McCarthy called a special meeting of the Republican Steering Committee to remove King from Judiciary — which has jurisdiction over immigration, voting rights and impeachment — and Agriculture, which is a prized committee for Iowans. King also lost his seat on the Small Business Committee. The steering committee vote was unanimous.
While Republican officials quickly turned on King, the party also came in for criticism from the Senate’s lone black Republican, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina. He noted that the GOP has long remained silent in the face of racist comments.
“Some in our party wonder why Republicans are constantly accused of racism — it is because of our silence when things like this are said,” Scott wrote in a Washington Post opinion column.
It is not clear what, if any, additional steps congressional Republican leaders will take with King. The National Republican Congressional Committee indicated Monday that they were not ready to step away from him.
“The NRCC does not get involved in primaries and isn’t going to comment on a hypothetical general election two years away,” said Chris Pack, a spokesman for the House campaign arm.
Democrats are moving to censure or reprimand the Iowa congressman, a stinging penalty. Among them were Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the highest ranking African-American in Congress, who introduced a measure Monday night in the form of a resolution of disapproval of King’s comments and white nationalism.
In the interview with The Times, King also reflected on the record number of minorities and women in the new Democratic-controlled House. “You could look over there and think the Democratic Party is no country for white men,” he said.
King’s hard-line immigration policies and demeaning comments about Hispanics foreshadowed Trump’s nativist rhetoric in his 2016 campaign, in his two years in the White House and during the government shutdown over a border wall. The president once boasted to King that he raised more money for him than anyone else, King recalled in the Times article, which traced how the Iowa congressman helped write the playbook for white identity politics that dominate the Republican Party under Trump.
He has already drawn one serious primary opponent, state Sen. Randy Feenstra, for the 2020 campaign and some high-profile Republicans have indicated they will not embrace his re-election.
“It does open the door for other individuals to take a look,” Gov. Kim Reynolds of Iowa said in a television interview last week of King’s closer-than-expected victory last year.
In addition to Reynolds’ criticism, Iowa Republican chair Jeff Kaufmann said the state party would “remain neutral” in King’s primary.
Iowa’s two Republican senators, Grassley and Joni Ernst, along with Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who had appointed King a co-chairman of his 2016 presidential campaign, all rebuked King in recent days.
All had eagerly embraced him in the past because of his standing with the state’s most conservative voters — keys to winning statewide elections in Iowa.
Grassley had endorsed King in November for re-election, even after the chairman of the House Republican election committee denounced King as a white supremacist.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.