Factbox-If not McCarthy then who? Other possible candidates for U.S.
House speaker
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[January 05, 2023]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Here are six potential candidates
to become speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives if Republican
Leader Kevin McCarthy fails to win the post due to a rebellion by
hardliners in his party.
REPRESENTATIVE STEVE SCALISE
The no. 2 House Republican is a supporter of McCarthy who could get
support from moderates in the caucus, while also appealing to hardline
conservatives. However some moderate Republicans have suggested there
would be no point in tossing McCarthy only to nominate someone so
ideologically similar to him.
For his part, Scalise, of Louisiana, has said that he supports McCarthy
and has repeatedly voted for him.
REPRESENTATIVE JIM JORDAN
The Ohio congressman is leader of the House Freedom Caucus, a group of
the most hardline House conservatives. Jordan has repeatedly supported
McCarthy in speaker votes, but all 20 holdouts voted for him on Tuesday.
REPRESENTATIVE BYRON DONALDS
Donalds will be sworn in for only his second term in Congress once the
speaker is chosen, but his far-right views have endeared him to the
group of holdouts. During the third vote on Tuesday he joined their
ranks in supporting Jordan, rather than McCarthy. On Wednesday he was
nominated for speaker three times, winning all 20 holdout votes each
time.
FORMER REPRESENTATIVE FRED UPTON
The longtime Republican was first elected in 1986 and did not seek
reelection to Congress in 2022. He could get support from Democrats as a
moderate who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump in 2021. He
signaled his openness to running for speaker to The Detroit News on
Tuesday, calling the suggestion "intriguing." The speaker is usually a
lawmaker from the majority party, but it could be an outsider.
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U.S. House Republican Whip Rep. Steve
Scalise (R-LA) makes his way through the U.S. Capitol on the first
day of the new Congress in Washington, U.S., January 3, 2023.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
FORMER REPRESENTATIVE JUSTIN AMASH
A former Republican lawmaker from Michigan, Amash was both a
co-founder of the House Freedom Caucus and the first Republican to
call for Trump's impeachment. He left his party in 2020 to join the
Libertarian Party and did not seek reelection that year. He has been
a vocal critic of the bureaucracy and backroom politics in
Washington, and was at the Capitol on Wednesday putting himself
forward as potential speaker.
DEMOCRATIC MINORITY LEADER HAKEEM JEFFRIES
Jeffries was unanimously elected to lead his party in November, and
has held all 212 Democratic votes during each of the six ballots.
However it is extremely unlikely that any Republican would agree to
support his bid for speaker regardless of any powersharing
agreement, given the political fallout from doing so.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; Editing by Scott Malone
and Alistair Bell)
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