During his grueling four-day, 15-vote fight for the gavel in
January, McCarthy agreed to a rule change that allowed any one
member of the House to call for his ouster - a threat that
hardline Republican Representative Matt Gaetz carried out on
Tuesday with what is called the "motion to vacate".
Representative Garret Graves, a longtime McCarthy ally, called
the current rule structure "completely dysfunctional".
He pointed to "the number of great people that are in this
conference that have said 'Hell no, I wouldn't even consider
that job because it's going to be a complete failure'" as a
reason that the motion to vacate rule "needs to be addressed."
The Republican Main Street Caucus, a group of over 70 moderates,
described the current rule in a statement as "a chokehold,"
adding that any speaker candidates "must explain to us how what
happened on Tuesday will never happen again."
The motion to vacate rule is enshrined in the U.S. House's
governing manual, but the specifics of it are left to each
Congress to decide.
Before 2019, the motion to vacate was considered a privileged
motion, which any one member could bring to the House floor.
But after two Republican speakers were threatened with and
ultimately left office over the move, Democratic Speaker Nancy
Pelosi pushed a rule change that required a majority of the
conference to support a motion to vacate.
Republican hardliners expressed little interest on Wednesday in
changing the rule back.
"We're going to elect the kind of speaker that's not going to
feel threatened by that (the current rule)," Representative Bob
Good, who voted to oust McCarthy, told reporters.
Representative Jim Jordan, who is running for speaker, said he
would leave any rule change up to the conference.
But several Republican moderates are pushing for a change.
Representative Mark Amodei called the status quo "untenable,"
adding that "we'll be spinning the wheels here ... every time
someone decides they disagree with the speaker."
Representative Mike Lawler said a change was "non-negotiable."
(Reporting by Moira Warburton; editing by Grant McCool)
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