Kevin McCarthy ousted by US House Republicans in historic vote
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[October 04, 2023]
By Moira Warburton, Richard Cowan and David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A handful of Republicans in the U.S. House of
Representatives on Tuesday ousted Republican Speaker Kevin McCarthy, as
party infighting plunged Congress into further chaos just days after it
narrowly averted a government shutdown.
The 216-to-210 vote marked the first time in history that the House
removed its leader, with eight Republicans voting with 208 Democrats to
remove McCarthy. McCarthy told reporters he would not make another run
for speaker.
"I fought for what I believe in," McCarthy said. "I believe I can
continue to fight, but maybe in a different manner."
The House looked set to go leaderless for at least a week, as multiple
Republicans said they planned to meet on Oct. 10 to discuss possible
McCarthy successors, with a vote on a new speaker planned for Oct. 11.
Tuesday's rebellion was led by Representative Matt Gaetz, a far-right
Republican from Florida and McCarthy antagonist who finally turned on
the speaker after he on Saturday relied on Democratic votes to help pass
a bill to avoid a partial government shutdown.
"Kevin McCarthy is a creature of the swamp. He has risen to power by
collecting special interest money and redistributing that money in
exchange for favors. We are breaking the fever now," Gaetz told
reporters after the vote.
It was the latest moment of high drama in a year when the
Republican-controlled House brought Washington to the brink of a
catastrophic default on U.S. debt of $31.4 trillion and a partial
government shutdown.
Republicans control the chamber by a narrow 221-212 majority, meaning
they can afford to lose no more than five votes if Democrats unite in
opposition.
McCarthy's ouster as speaker brings legislative activity in the House to
a halt, with another government shutdown deadline looming Nov. 17 if
Congress does not extend funding.
The White House said it hoped the House would move swiftly to choose a
replacement speaker, a position second in line to the presidency after
the vice president.
UNCHARTED WATERS
The vote left Congress in uncharted waters as it scrambles to update
farm-subsidy and nutrition programs, pass government funding bills and
consider further aid to Ukraine.
It was unclear who would succeed McCarthy.
McCarthy had repeatedly angered Democrats in recent weeks, including by
launching an impeachment inquiry into Biden and on Saturday by giving
them little time to read a stopgap spending bill to avert a government
shutdown that he needed their votes to pass.
Democrats could have saved McCarthy but, after considering it, said they
would not help Republicans resolve their own problems.
Other Republican leaders like Steve Scalise and Tom Emmer could possibly
be candidates, though neither has publicly expressed interest.
Representative Patrick McHenry was named to the post on a temporary
basis.
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U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) walks back to the Speaker's
office after a motion to vacate the chair of Speaker of the House
and end McCarthy's continued leadership passed by a vote of 216-210,
at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. October 3, 2023.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The last two Republican speakers, Paul Ryan and John Boehner,
retired from Congress after clashes with their right wing.
In debate on the House floor, Gaetz and a handful of allies
criticized McCarthy for relying on Democratic votes to pass
temporary funding that headed off a partial government shutdown.
"We need a speaker who will fight for something - anything - other
than staying on as speaker," said Republican Representative Bob
Good.
Representative Nancy Mace told reporters she voted to remove
McCarthy as speaker because he broke promises to her on improving
access to birth control and supporting a bill she wrote on rape
kits.
"I've made deals with Kevin McCarthy, with the speaker, that he has
not kept to help women in this country," Mace said. "We have done
nothing for them."
McCarthy's supporters, including some of the chamber's most vocal
conservatives, said McCarthy had successfully limited spending and
advanced other conservative priorities even though Democrats control
the White House and the Senate.
"Think long and hard before you plunge us into chaos, because that's
where we're headed," said Republican Representative Tom Cole.
NO DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT
Democrats said they viewed McCarthy as untrustworthy after he broke
a May agreement on spending with Biden.
"Let them wallow in their pigsty of incompetence," Representative
Pramila Jayapal told reporters before the vote.
Gaetz was one of more than a dozen Republicans who repeatedly voted
against McCarthy's bid for speaker in January. McCarthy ultimately
secured the gavel after 15 rounds of voting over four days. To win
the job, McCarthy agreed to rules that made it easier to challenge
his leadership.
McCarthy supporters have said Gaetz was motivated by a hunger for
publicity, a chance to win higher office or resentment over an
ongoing ethics probe into possible sexual misconduct and illicit
drug use.
Gaetz has denied wrongdoing and said he is not motivated by a
dislike of McCarthy.
"This isn't a critique of the individual - it's a critique of the
job. The job hasn't been done," he said.
(Reporting by Makini Brice, David Morgan, Richard Cowan, Nandita
Bose, Moira Warburton, Susan Heavey and Doina Chiacu; Writing by
Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell, Howard Goller,
Grant McCool and Cynthia Osterman)
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