Did a Wild Rumor of an Affair with a Congresswoman Cause McCarthy to Drop Out of the Speaker Race?
PoliticsHouse Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy very, very, very abruptly dropped out of the race to become House Speaker just now. Chaos reigns. Gossipers on the right side of the aisle are heavily implying that McCarthy bailed to avoid having an alleged extramarital affair with Congresswoman Renee Ellmers of North Carolina made public.
McCarthy is a fairly popular guy in the House and was a favorite to become Speaker; his dropping-out announcement said only that he’s concluded he’s not the one to “unite” the squabbling family of colicky infants that make up the Republican party:
That explanation sounded a little lacking, and the Week notes that several right-leaning sites are advancing a far more Scandal-worthy alternate explanation. Blogger Chuck C. Johnson, who has repeatedly accused Ellmers and McCarthy of having an affair, claimed yesterday to have received a cease-and-desist order from Ellmers’ attorney, ordering him to stop making “false and defamatory” statements about the Congresswoman and calling the rumors “unequivocally and indisputably false.”
Erick Erickson of Red State writes that the rumor began spreading widely with a scandalous email, sent by a person he identifies only as “a guy out in America who has emails for a massive number of members of Congress and the email addresses of highly influential conservatives outside Congress.”