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/* U.S. House of Representatives */
{{cquote|I wouldn't say party regularity enters into it so much on the Appropriations Committee. On some other committees it might. But we're the no-spend party. I like to say we have more fiscal responsibility than the other party, so the people on our side are all that way. Usually we have no way of knowing whether he [a candidate for the Committee] would be a spender. Of course, if we knew that someone was inclined to spend money and was opposed to everything the Republican Party stood for in that way, why we wouldn't put him on the Appropriations Committee.}}
In early 1965, Arends was targeted for defeat for his post as the House Republican Whip by [[New Jersey]] [[Moderate Republican]] <ref>Berliner, David C. (June 3, 1973). [https://www.nytimes.com/1973/06/03/archives/frelinghuysen-moderate-republican-an-affluent-district.html Frelinghuysen: Moderate Republican]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved August 8, 2021.</ref> colleague [[Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr.]],<ref name=wapo/> the father of Rodney Frelinghuysen. His fellow conservative colleague [[Charles Halleck]] had just been unseated by Moderate Republican then-representative [[Gerald Ford]] from the House Republican Leader position, which was attributed to backlash against Halleck's leadership following significant defeats in the 1964 elections.<ref>[https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/notablealumni/13/ Charles Abraham Halleck]. ''Maurer School of Law''. Retrieved June 13, 2021.</ref> However, Arends had enough support within the House GOP and maintained his position by eleven votes.<ref name=wapo/>
A member of the House Armed Services Committee, Arends defended the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] in March 1964 against critics.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1964/03/27/archives/arends-defends-cia-against-critics.html Arends Defends C.I.A. Against Critics]. ''The New York Times''. Retrieved June 13, 2021.</ref>