Power shifted in Washington, and nothing about it feels safe. After weeks of paralysis, Mike Johnson’s confirmation snapped a bitter deadlock—but the relief is razor-thin.
Allies call him a principled guardian of order. Opponents see a quiet ideologue, ready to redraw the lines of power. Now, with fiscal deadlines looming and tempers raw, every choice he makes could rewr…
Johnson steps into leadership with the weight of a country already exhausted by crisis. His supporters believe his measured style and focus on fiscal restraint can restore predictability to a Congress that has lurched from showdown to shutdown.
They see in him a chance to lower the temperature, re-center debate on budgets, security, and institutional norms, and prove that government can still function without constant brinkmanship.
Yet skepticism runs deep. Critics fear that beneath his calm demeanor lies an uncompromising agenda that may harden partisan lines rather than soften them.
The first real tests—funding the government, navigating defense priorities, and responding to social flashpoints—will define whether he governs as a bridge-builder or a battle commander.
For millions watching beyond the Capitol dome, Johnson’s tenure will answer a larger question: is Washington still capable of choosing stability over spectacle?