Republicans drop Jim Jordan's US House speaker bid after third failed
vote
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[October 21, 2023]
By Katharine Jackson, Gram Slattery and David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hardline conservative Republican Jim Jordan's
quest to become speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives ended on
Friday as his fellow Republicans revoked their support following a
third, failed vote on the House floor.
That means that the House until at least next week will remain unable to
respond to President Joe Biden's request for a $106 billion
national-security package including military aid for Ukraine and Israel
or take action to stave off a looming Nov. 18 partial government
shutdown.
Support for Jordan's candidacy faded over the course of the week. He
received 194 votes in a third round of balloting on Friday, down from
the 200 votes he received on Tuesday and well short of the majority he
needed to claim the speaker's gavel.
Republicans then voted 112-86 to revoke Jordan's nomination in a
closed-door meeting.
"It was an honor to be their speaker designee," Jordan told reporters
after the meeting. "We need to come together to figure out who our
speaker is going to be. I’m going to work as hard as I can to help that
individual."
It is not clear who Republicans might turn to next.
"We'll have to go back to the drawing board," said Representative Kevin
McCarthy, who was ousted as speaker by a small faction of his fellow
Republicans on Oct. 3.
McCarthy later endorsed Representative Tom Emmer, the No. 3 House
Republican. At least four other lawmakers have said they would run for
the job, with possibly more to come.
Republicans control the House by a narrow 221-212 majority and can
afford few defections on party-line votes, a vulnerability highlighted
by the current display of legislative dysfunction.
Aside from McCarthy and Jordan, Republicans have also rejected their No.
2, Steve Scalise, who won the nomination last week but dropped out after
he was unable to consolidate support.
Lawmakers said they would hear from candidates on Monday evening, with a
possible vote on Tuesday. Aside from Emmer, candidates include Kevin
Hern, who leads a conservative policy group, and Austin Scott, a
low-profile lawmaker who mounted a brief speaker bid last week.
Republicans have already considered and rejected a backup option that
would allow the House take up pressing matters, like Biden's aid package
or funding for the U.S. government that is due to expire on Nov. 17.
That plan would give more authority to Republican Representative Patrick
McHenry, who is filling the speaker's chair on a temporary basis. House
Democrats and the White House have said they are open to the idea, but
Republicans opted not to pursue it on Thursday.
McHenry himself has not publicly backed the plan. He told reporters on
Friday that he hoped to return to his previous post as chair of the
Financial Services Committee.
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Speaker of the House Pro Tempore Patrick McHenry (R-NC) talks to
reporters after Rep. Jim Jordan dropped out of the race for Speaker
of the House as a result of losing a secret ballot vote by members
of the Republican conference on whether he should drop out of the
race, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 20, 2023.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
'PROBLEMS WITH THE 2020 ELECTION'
A close ally of Donald Trump, Jordan was a "significant player" in
the former president's attempts to overturn Biden's 2020 election
win, according to a congressional investigation.
"I think there were all kinds of problems with the 2020 election,
and I've been clear about that," he said at a news conference before
the vote.
Jordan has built his reputation as a leader of the party's
uncompromising right flank. He helped to engineer government
shutdowns in 2013 and 2018 and helped to push Republican Speaker
John Boehner into retirement in 2015.
His backers said that would make him an effective fighter for
conservative policies in a town where Democrats control the Senate
and the White House.
But Jordan's bare-knuckle approach seems to have worked against him,
as some of his Republican opponents have been outraged by a pressure
campaign organized by his supporters that resulted in harassing
phone calls and death threats.
Jordan's allies said that should not matter. "All of us in Congress
receive death threats. I don't know if that's a news flash for
anybody here," Representative Scott Perry said.
Still, 25 Republican lawmakers voted against him in Friday's vote,
more than the 20 who voted against him on Tuesday.
Jordan's vote total of 194 was less than McCarthy netted in any of
the 15 grueling rounds of voting in January.
Democrats called Jordan a dangerous extremist and unanimously voted
against him in all three floor votes.
"Their nominee's vision is a direct attack on the freedom and the
rights of the American people, and he's got the record to prove it,"
Democratic Representative Katherine Clark said on the House floor.
Jordan's Republican opponents declined to celebrate in the wake of
his defeat.
"I'm not feeling too good about any of this," said Representative
Mario Diaz-Balart. "The only thing that's positive is that now we
can get back to trying to elect the speaker who has the support of
the conference."
(Reporting by David Morgan, Katharine Jackson and Gram Slattery;
writing by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone, Chizu Nomiyama,
Nick Zieminski, Grant McCool and Jonathan Oatis)
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