The Johnson Trust Fall

mike johnson
It seems both sides of the ideological spectrum on the right don’t have a lot of trust in Johnson, and that trust deficit grows with every major vote they take. Photo: Kent Nishimura/Getty Images
Leigh Ann Caldwell
March 23, 2025

This week, members of Congress will return to a very different Washington than the one they left just 10 days ago. While they were in recess, Donald Trump started dismantling the Education Department; called for the impeachment of a federal judge; negotiated a questionable first step toward a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine; and threatened to sanction any law firms that participate in legal actions against his administration. Republicans will likely ignore all of that, and get to work on finding a compromise budget framework—which will eventually include tax cuts and spending cuts—that is agreeable to both House and Senate Republicans, a process that could take anywhere from a few weeks to a few months. Democrats, for their part, will be under enormous pressure to figure out how to respond to any and all of it.