Sunday, May 5, 2024

As Republicans split over who will be House speaker, McCarthy positions himself as a de facto leader



WASHINGTON – Republicans haven’t any transparent concept who to elect U.S. House speaker, leaving an remarkable energy vacuum in Congress and critically proscribing America’s skill to temporarily reply to the crisis in Israel — or any choice of different issues at house or in a foreign country.

On Monday, the ousted former speaker, Kevin McCarthy, temporarily jumped into the void, bitterly criticizing President Joe Biden’s management over the energy of its protection of Israel and positioning himself as a de facto Republican leader despite the fact that his colleagues toppled him from energy.

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But it isn’t in any respect transparent if McCarthy may critically make a comeback — or if some other Republicans seeking the gavel, Steve Scalise or Jim Jordan — can be elected speaker as their majority dissembles into infighting. House Republicans are scheduled to satisfy at the back of closed doorways Monday night time to check out to regain regulate in their majority forward of imaginable speaker votes this week.

“Whether I’m speaker or not… I can lead in any position I’m in,” McCarthy, R-Calif., stated on the Capitol.

The upheaval within the House places the U.S. Congress at a crossroads all through a time of disaster, the primary time in historical past it has booted a speaker from energy, running with out a constitutional officer, 2d in line to the presidency. House trade, and with it maximum congressional motion, has come to a standstill.

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It’s under no circumstances transparent what, if the rest, the Congress can do with most effective an period in-between leader. At possibility is instant support to Israel at the side of passage of a answer that may display U.S. give a boost to for Israel and condemnation of Hamas for the assault as the area is now engulfed in battle.

And there are broader calls for on Congress, together with Ukraine’s requests for support as it fights Russia and the want to fund the U.S. executive once more via Nov. 17 or possibility a federal shutdown. The Senate in the meantime could also be out of consultation, on recess till subsequent week.

“Does anybody have the votes? No,” said Rep. Mike Lawler of New York, a centrist Republican pushing for McCarthy to be reinstated as speaker.

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Republicans are scheduled to meet privately in the evening as they assess the path forward after McCarthy’s historic ouster by a handful of hardline Republicans, led by Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla.,

Gaetz has said on social media there are “two great men” operating for speaker, indicating he may give a boost to both Scalise or Jordan.

But neither Scalise, the majority leader who is the second-ranking Republican in the House, nor Jordan, who is the chairman of the Judiciary Committee and backed by Donald Trump, appear to have the votes needed to secure the majority vote.

Both Republicans who have eyed the speaker’s gavel for some time come with political strengths, but also baggage that leaves colleagues split and skeptical.

Scalise is battling blood cancer, and is seen by a hero among colleagues for having survived severe injuries from a mass shooting during a congressional baseball game practice in 2017. But the Louisiana Republican had apologized in 2014 after he was found to have addressed a white supremacist group in 2002 founded by a former Ku Klux Klan leader. Scalise said he didn’t know of the group’s racial views.

Jordan is a high-profile political firebrand known for his close alliance with Trump, particularly when the former president was working to overturn the results of the 2020 election that led to the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol.

Some years ago, Jordan and his office denied allegations from former wrestlers during his time as an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State University who accused him of knowing about claims they were inappropriately groped by an Ohio doctor. Jordan and his office have said that he was never aware of any abuse.

“House Republicans need to unite and show the country that we’re fighting for them,” Jordan said Sunday on Fox News.

The House Republicans hold just a slim majority and they are considering rules changes to avoid another spectacle electing a new speaker like the 15 rounds it took McCarthy in January to seize the gavel when Gaetz and others first blocked him at the start of the year.

While the full House ultimately votes on the new speaker, the position usually falls to a person from the party with the House majority.

One idea is to require the candidate for House speaker to reach the 218 majority threshold during internal voting behind closed doors before the Republicans bring the vote up publicly on the House floor.

Another idea is to change the rule that allows a single lawmaker to make a “motion to vacate” the office — which is the rare procedural tool Gaetz used to force a snap vote that ousted McCarthy. In previous years, it required more the one lawmaker to make the motion.

But the evening meeting is expected to be long on infighting and short on solutions as Republicans reel from the chaos that has thrown their majority into grave turmoil.

Democrats so far reject both Scalise and Jordan, and are almost certain to vote against both Republicans. McCarthy’s ouster came with the help of Democrats, who voiced their disdain for the speaker and joined with the handful of eight Republicans to oust him.

For now, no consensus candidate that could bridge both parties seems at all within reach.

Meantime, Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., has been named as speaker pro-tempore, a position created in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks to ensure the continuity of government in Washington.

The rules around the temporary speaker position have been untested before, though they appear to indicate the main power in the role is to ensure the election of a new speaker.

But if House Republicans are unable to quickly agree on a speaker, McHenry could be in the position for some time.

Any moves McHenry makes in the temporary position have the potential to become precedent-setting for the House. The North Carolina Republican is viewed as a serious legislator, nearly 20 years in office, even though his first acts were to boot Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi from her private office at the Capitol.

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Associated Press writers Farnoush Amiri and Stephen Groves contributed to this file.

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