STOP TRYING TO MAKE 'KEY BUMPS' HAPPEN — Near the end of the millennial classic "Mean Girls," there's a scene that tells us a lot about House GOP politics right now. After getting challenged by Regina, the high school queen bee played by Rachel McAdams, Tina Fey's teacher character, Ms. Norbury, asks the entire class: "How many of you have been personally victimized by Regina George?" Nearly every student raises their hands, showing the damage done by Regina's gossiping. While he's hardly the most popular guy in the Capitol — in fact, he's nearly the opposite — 26-year-old Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.) is having a Regina-like effect on his party right now. The intensity of the Republican outcry against Cawthorn has come as something of a surprise to even keen observers of Congress. After all, he's not the only conservative whose antics off the floor have distracted from House Republicans' attempts to project unity and substance as they prepare for a likely takeover of the chamber. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has (R-Ga.)harassed a Democratic lawmaker during debate over an LGBTQ rights bill andlikened Covid public health requirements to the Holocaust, among other behavior. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) suggested on video, twice, that a Muslim Democratic lawmaker was a terrorist. Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.)posted an anime video showing himself killing yet another Democratic lawmaker. The Regina factor is the chief reason Cawthorn is on the outs with his party right now, while his three lightning-rod colleagues are seen differently. When Cawthorn told a podcast interviewer that Washington is riddled with "sexual perversion," suggesting that some of his own colleagues have invited him "to an orgy" and used cocaine in front of him, he did more than implicate the entire GOP conference in possible immorality. He also made it in bounds for reporters and voters to ask his colleagues tense questions about how they spend their evenings in Washington. Few people in the Capitol believe Cawthorn is telling anything close to the truth. His own conference leader told reporters Wednesday thatCawthorn had climbed down in private, connecting his coke-sniffing talk to a faraway "staffer in a parking garage." Yet unless and until Cawthorn names names, asPOLITICO was the first to report that some of his fellow Republicans want him to do, he is politically victimizing his entire party. Greene, Boebert and Gosar don't antagonize their fellow Republicans as broadly and directly. Greene has occasionally slammed her own in the GOP, but she reserves her harshest rhetoric for Democrats, as do Boebert and Gosar. Boebert is an easier-to-defend figure for some of her colleagues, as Islamophobic as her past comments were and as much as Democrats despise her. That's in part because of her own implication in broad, nefarious allegations by a few House Democrats, who have raised the explosive charge that some of their GOP colleagues may have conducted "reconnaissance tours" of the Capitol before the Jan. 6 insurrection. Those Democrats' remarks were seen as alluding to Boebert – who led a Jan. 5 tour of the building. Except that no evidence has emerged so far to support a claim that implicates Boebert by association. Greene and Gosar should be much easier intra-party targets, having appeared at a conference organized by white nationalists in addition to their other objectionable forays. The problem:Democrats have already dealt that duo the harshest punishment that Republican leaders could effectively apply, by stripping them of their committee spots. Sure, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy could have been louder and angrier than he was in public about Greene and Gosar's flirtation with white nationalists. But when it came to specific punishment, Democrats' decision to take Greene and Gosar's committee spots left the GOP leader with no real arrows in his quiver. It was notable, then,to hear McCarthy warn on Wednesday that a loss of committee assignments wasn't off the table for Cawthorn. Also notable: Greene is not getting a free intraparty pass to reelection, either. The Republican Jewish Coalition isbacking her GOP primary challenger, Jennifer Strahan. Even so, we should remember what happens to the victimizer Regina at the end of "Mean Girls": She's welcomed back and given a piece of the heroine's Spring Fling Queen tiara. If Cawthorn can survive his own colleagues' support for his primary challenger and get reelected, he'll hang onto his own small piece of the House GOP crown. And the day of open debate over whether Cawthorn could claim to not know what cocaine was while using the drug-savvy term "key bump" will be a distant memory. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight's author at eschor@politico.com, or on Twitter at @eschor.
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