From Bakersfield to DC, McCarthy’s unlikely rise in GOP
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — People watching Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s political rise often marvel at how he got here. He’s the not-so-serious guy who used to bop around town selling sandwiches and cars before dipping into politics. He was considered likable and fun but hardly Bakersfield’s star pupil.
The rest of the country might be stunned, too, if Republicans win in November and McCarthy succeeds in his quest to become speaker of the House, next in line after the vice-president to the presidency.
Yet many in Bakersfield are musing that “Kevin” — he’s still just easygoing, uncomplicated Kevin here — might actually pull off this ascent. The Republican Party insiders who nurtured his career are proud, if a bit surprised. Critics are just as stumped at what they see as a new, low bar for top leadership. But in this under-examined corner of California’s Trump country, there’s also a bit of told-you-so defiance that McCarthy’s brand of hustle and persistence pays off, even in Washington.
“People probably have a certain perception of Kevin — he didn’t graduate from Harvard or do a lot of things politicians do,” said Rick Priest, a McCarthy pal since the seventh grade. “He works hard. He has a lot of people behind him here.”