Republicans pick Trump ally as nominee for House speaker
House Republicans have been fighting bitterly over whom they should elect to replace Kevin McCarthy, and the future direction of their party.
Republicans chose Rep Jim Jordan as their new nominee for House speaker on Friday during internal voting, putting the gavel within reach of the staunch ally of the party’s presidential front-runner Donald Trump.
Mr Jordan, of Ohio, will now try to unite colleagues from the deeply divided House Republican majority around his bid ahead of a floor vote, which could come next week.
Frustrated House Republicans have been fighting bitterly over whom they should elect to replace the speaker they ousted, Rep Kevin McCarthy, and the future direction of their party. The stalemate, now in its second week, has thrown the House into chaos, halting business.
“I think Jordan would do a great job,” Mr McCarthy said ahead of the vote. “We got to get this back on track.”
But not all Republicans want to see Mr Jordan as speaker, second in line to the presidency. Some worry their House majority is being frittered away to countless rounds of infighting and some do not want to reward Mr Jordan’s wing, which sparked the turmoil.
“If we’re going to be the majority party, we have to act like the majority party,” said Rep Austin Scott, who posed a last-ditch challenge to Mr Jordan.
While the firebrand Mr Jordan has a long list of detractors who started making their opposition known, Mr Jordan’s supporters said voting against the Trump ally during a public vote on the House floor would be tougher since he is so popular and well known among more conservative Republican voters.
Heading into a morning meeting, Mr Jordan said: “I feel real good.”
Other potential speaker choices were also being floated. Some Republicans proposed simply giving Rep Patrick McHenry, who was appointed interim speaker pro tempore, greater authority to lead the House for some time.
The House, without a speaker, is essentially unable to function during a time of turmoil in the US and wars overseas. The political pressure increasingly is on Republicans to reverse course, reassert majority control and govern in Congress.
Absences heading into the weekend could lower the majority threshold needed, and Republicans said they were down about a dozen politicians as of midday on Friday. No floor votes were scheduled as attendance thinned before the weekend.
In announcing his decision to withdraw from the nomination, Mr Scalise said late on Thursday the Republican majority still has to come together and “open up the House again. But clearly not everybody is there”.
Asked if he would throw his support behind Mr Jordan, Mr Scalise said: “It’s got to be people that aren’t doing it for themselves and their own personal interest.”
But Mr Jordan’s allies swung into high gear at a chance for the hard-right leader to seize the gavel.
“Make him the speaker. Do it tonight,” said Rep Jim Banks. “He’s the only one who can unite our party.”
Mr Jordan also received an important nod on Friday from the Republican party’s campaign chairman, Rep Richard Hudson, who made an attempt to unify the fighting factions.
“Removing Speaker Kevin McCarthy was a mistake,” Mr Hudson wrote on social media, saying the party found itself at a crossroads also blocking Mr Scalise. “We must unite around one leader.”
Earlier in the week, Mr Jordan had nominally dropped out of the race he initially lost to Mr Scalise, 113-99, during internal balloting.
Mr Scalise had been labouring to peel off more than 100 votes, mostly from those who backed Mr Jordan. But many hard-liners taking their cues from Mr Trump have dug in for a prolonged fight to replace Mr McCarthy after his historic ousting from the job.
The holdouts argued that as majority leader, Mr Scalise was no better choice, that he should be focusing on his health as he battles cancer and that he was not the leader they would support.
Handfuls of Republicans announced they were sticking with Mr Jordan, Mr McCarthy or someone other than Mr Scalise — including Mr Trump, the former president. The position as House speaker does not need to go to a member of Congress.
Mr Trump, the early front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, repeatedly discussed Mr Scalise’s health during a radio interview that aired Thursday.
Mr Scalise has been diagnosed with a form of blood cancer known as multiple myeloma and is being treated, but he has also said he was definitely up for the speaker’s job.
On Friday, another California Republican, Rep Tom McClintock, had introduced a motion to reinstate Mr McCarthy during the morning meeting, but it was shelved.
“I just told them, no, let’s not do that,” Mr McCarthy said afterwards. “Let’s walk through this and have an election.”
The situation is not fully different from the start of the year, when Mr McCarthy faced a similar backlash from a different group of far-right holdouts who ultimately gave their votes to elect him speaker, then engineered his historic downfall.
But the maths this time is even more daunting, and the problematic political dynamic is only worsening.
Exasperated Democrats, who have been waiting for the Republican majority to recover from Mr McCarthy’s ousting, urged them to figure it out.
“The House Democrats have continued to make clear that we are ready, willing and able to find a bipartisan path forward,” Mr Jeffries said, including doing away with the rule that allows a single lawmaker to force a vote against the speaker.
“But we need traditional Republicans to break from the extremists and partner with us.”