House Speaker Ryan mulls retirement after
2018 elections: Politico
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[December 15, 2017]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
House Speaker Paul Ryan has told confidants he would like to retire
after the 2018 congressional elections, Politico reported on Thursday,
but the Wisconsin lawmaker and an aide played down the report, saying he
wasn't quitting any time soon.
"Ryan has made it known to some of his closest confidants that this will
be his final term as speaker," Politico said.
Politico said it interviewed three dozen people who knew Ryan -
including lawmakers, congressional and administration aides,
conservative intellectuals and Republican lobbyists - and that "not a
single person believed Ryan will stay in Congress past 2018."
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said President Donald Trump had
spoken to Ryan "and made sure that the speaker knew very clearly and in
no uncertain terms that if that news was true, he was very unhappy with
it."
"The speaker assured the president that those were not accurate reports
and that they looked forward to working together for a long time to
come," Sanders said.
Ryan is a long-time champion of tax reform who has helped bring
Republicans in Congress to the cusp of a tax overhaul for the first time
in a generation. If passed, it would be Trump's first major legislative
victory since he took office in January despite being helped by
Republican control of Congress.
When asked by reporters on Thursday if he was planning to quit, Ryan
said with a chuckle: "I'm not, no."
Asked later about the Politico report, Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong
did not directly deny it, instead saying: "This is pure speculation. As
the speaker himself said today, he’s not going anywhere any time soon."
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U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) speaks during a news conference
on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 12, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri
Gripas
Ryan would be unlikely to publicize any planned departure because it
could hurt his fundraising capacity on behalf of fellow Republicans
and undercut his ability to make deals in the House of
Representatives.
A budget hawk who was Mitt Romney's vice presidential running mate
in 2012, Ryan reluctantly took over as speaker in 2015 following the
resignation of John Boehner, who had held the post since early 2011
after Republicans won control of the chamber from Democrats.
Boehner's tenure as speaker was marked by fractious divisions among
competing groups within the Republican Party. Ryan has tried to move
the party beyond those disputes with only limited success.
Party divisions earlier this year prevented Republicans from
delivering a promised overhaul of healthcare legislation, and the
path toward tax reform has also been complicated by internal
disagreements and intense lobbying from industry groups.
(Reporting by Tim Ahmann; Additional reporting by Richard Cowan;
Editing by David Alexander and Bernadette Baum)
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