Republican Jim Jordan loses first US House speaker vote, plays for time
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[October 18, 2023]
By David Morgan, Makini Brice and Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Combative right-wing Republican Jim Jordan on
Tuesday sought more time to build support for his bid for speaker of the
U.S. House of Representatives after coming up short in a first vote,
raising questions about his prospects for winning the job.
Lacking the 217 votes he needs to claim the speaker's gavel, Jordan
postponed further action until 11 a.m. ET (1500 GMT) on Wednesday, while
he scrambled to pressure the 20 fellow Republicans who voted against him
on Tuesday afternoon.
Democrats seized on the prolonged Republican infighting to make the case
for a compromise candidate that would enjoy the backing of both parties
- a sharp departure from how Congress typically functions after the
unprecedented ouster of speaker Kevin McCarthy on Oct. 3.
"There's only two paths: either you're going to continue to bend the
knee to the most extreme members of your conference, who are not
interested in governing; or you can partner with Democrats to do the
business of the American people," Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries
said.
Tuesday's failed vote meant that the House remains leaderless, as it has
been since a handful of Republican insurgents engineered McCarthy's
removal. That has left Congress unable to respond to wars in the Middle
East and Ukraine, with just a month to go before the U.S. government
faces another partial shutdown deadline.
It was not clear whether Jordan, a close ally of former President Donald
Trump, would pick up more support or see his opposition grow in a second
vote on Wednesday. Jordan got 200 votes in the first round - the lowest
tally McCarthy ever saw during 15 rounds of voting over four days in
January.
Jordan told reporters he was "making progress" after several hours of
closed-door talks with Republicans.
"We gotta have a speaker and it can't be some deal with the Democrats,"
he said.
McCarthy was ousted for reaching a deal with Democrats late last month
to head off the fourth partial U.S. government shutdown in a decade,
triggering the current period of dysfunction.
If Jordan prevails, a conservative who has spent years fighting with
leaders of his own party could end up in one of the most powerful jobs
in Washington, putting him second in line for the presidency behind the
vice president.
First he will have to win over more of the 20 Republicans who voted for
other candidates.
Many of them are moderates who represent politically competitive
districts, while others specialize in negotiating the complex spending
bills that keep the U.S. government running, deals that typically
require a willingness to compromise.
'I WILL NOT BE PRESSURED'
Several Republicans from the New York City area said they voted against
Jordan because he opposed benefits for survivors of the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks, as well as tax policies and disaster aid that would help their
residents.
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U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), the top contender in the race to be the
next Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, reacts as he
appears to come up short of the number of votes needed to be elected
Speaker during the first round of voting for a new Speaker on the
floor of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol in
Washington, U.S., October 17, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Others objected to high-pressure tactics to get them to fall in
line. "I will not be pressured or intimidated," said Representative
Mario Diaz-Balart, who voted for Scalise.
Representative Ken Buck said he was concerned that Jordan has still
not acknowledged that Trump lost the 2020 presidential election to
Democratic President Joe Biden.
Jordan was a "significant player" in efforts to overturn Trump's
election defeat, a congressional investigation found.
Republicans control the House by a narrow 221-212 margin, giving
them little room for error on divisive votes like this one.
New Republican challengers could emerge if Jordan does not pick up
support. Potential candidates include Tom Emmer, the No. 3 House
Republican, and Patrick McHenry, who is temporarily filling the
speaker's chair.
Jeffries, the Democratic leader, said there have been "informal
conversations" with Republicans about giving McHenry more powers to
ensure the chamber can take up pressing matters like aid for Israel
and Ukraine and U.S. government funding.
Democrats have painted Jordan as an extremist who would take orders
from Trump.
"We are talking about someone who has spent their entire career
trying to hold our country back," Democratic Representative Pete
Aguilar said on the House floor.
A fixture on conservative media outlets, Jordan has used his perch
as chair of the House Judiciary Committee to help lead an
impeachment inquiry into Biden that Democrats decry as baseless.
He helped found the House Freedom Caucus, which then-Speaker John
Boehner dubbed "legislative terrorists" before members of that group
pressured him to retire. Jordan was an architect of government
shutdowns in 2013 and 2018.
Before entering politics, Jordan served as a wrestling coach at Ohio
State University. Former students in 2018 accused him of turning a
blind eye to sexual abuse of college wrestlers by the wrestling
team's doctor. He denied those allegations and a university
investigation found no hard evidence that he knew of the abuse.
(Reporting by David Morgan, Makini Brice and Moira Warburton,
additional reporting by Katharine Jackson; Writing by Andy Sullivan;
Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis and Grant McCool)
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