Update (2228ET): In a hilarious cap to today’s chaos surrounding the GOP House Speaker vote, anti-McCarthy Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida wrote to the Architect of the Capitol to ask how long McCarthy – who prematurely moved in to the Speaker’s office – would be able to occupy the room “before he is considered a squatter.”
Gaetz sent a letter to the Architect of the Capitol questioning why McCarthy is allowed to occupy the Speakerâs office. pic.twitter.com/gOlXOtlHQj
— Juliegrace Brufke (@juliegraceb) January 4, 2023
Update (1836ET):Â The day ended without the election of a House Speaker, as support for Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s (R-CA) waned throughout the day.
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), meanwhile, saw his stock rise with each of Tuesday’s three votes.
As The Epoch Times notes, in the first vote of a tumultuous first day of the 118th Congress, McCarthy, the California Republican who led the party to regain the majority in the November 2022 mid-term election, fell 15 votes short of the 218 he needed to become Speaker of the House.
McCarthy received 203 votes from Republican colleagues, while 212 Democrats voted for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), who will serve as House Minority Leader in 2023. Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz), the leader of the anti-McCarthy members, received 10 votes. A handful of Republicans voted for candidates who were not nominated.
Second Vote
Incoming House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) cited Saint Paulâs admonition about âfinishing the raceâ as he nominated House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) for Speaker of the House.
In his floor speech, Jordan said the House must do three basic things in 2023, including getting the U.S. border with Mexico under control and restoring U.S. military strength, stopping profligate spending by Democrats, and conducting a comprehensive oversight effort of President Joe Bidenâs administration.
âWe have to do the Oversight and Investigations that needs to be done. This idea that bureaucrats who never put their name on the ballot but think they run the country, who assaulted our constituentsâ First Amendment liberties. they need to be held accountable,â Jordan said.
âThat has to happen, we need to do it. We need to do it in a way thatâs consistent with the Constitution, but we need to do it vigorously and aggressively. That is part of our duty as members of this body,â Jordan continued.
Jordanâs nomination of McCarthy followed the California Republicanâs failure to marshall a majority of the 434 Members of the Representatives assembled earlier in the day for the first vote on a new Speaker.
Jeffries was also nominated a second time. Then Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) nominated Jordan, despite the fact the Ohio Republican made clear he continued to support McCarthy. Then the second ballot roll call was called.
All of the 19 Republicans who opposed McCarthy in the first ballot shifted their votes to Jordan, including Biggs. While McCarthy gained the same 203 votes he received in the first balloting, which again left him short of the needed majority of 218. All 212 Democrats again voted for Jeffries.
One of those who voted for Jordan was House Freedom Caucus (HFC) Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), who during the second ballot posted on Twitter his determination to fight McCarthy no matter how many ballots are required.
âI stand firmly committed to changing the status quo no matter how many ballots this takes. If McCarthy had fought nearly as hard to defeat the failed, toxic policies of the Biden Administration as he has for himself, he would be Speaker of the House right now,â Perry wrote.
Tension is building on the House floor among Republicans. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) told Fox News that âIf all they want is somebody other than Kevin, letâs be candid. Steve Scalise is supporting Kevin, Jim Jordan is supporting Kevin. As a matter of fact, every member of the leadership team, including every ranking member without becoming a chairman, is supporting Kevin. So we are in a situation in which the 19 have to explain what they want.â
Democrats were quick to seize on the GOP confusion, with Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) issuing a statement following the first vote observing that âHunter Thompson was right: âWhen the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.â This is what a Republican majority gets us: chaos.â
âDemocrats are here and ready to do our jobs for the country. Republican disarray is standing in the way.â
Third Vote
House Republicans remained deadlocked after voting for the third time Tuesday without giving enough votes to make McCarthy the new Speaker of the House.
McCarthy lost one voteâRep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.)âon the third vote of the day for a total of 202 votes. Democrat Hakeem Jeffries of New York had the highest total with 212, with all of his Democratic colleagues but no Republicans voting for him.
Incoming House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) drew 20 votes, but his own ballot went to McCarthy for the third time. Jordan received 19 votes on the second ballot.
The conservative rebels who have held firm against McCarthy and coalesced around Jordan on the third ballot remained steadfastly determined to keep their California colleague from succeeding Democrat Nancy Pelosi, also of California, as the new Speaker.
In an impassioned speech nominating Jordan on the third ballot, Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) put the issue between McCarthy and the dissidents as one of how best to stand up to President Joe Biden and the Senate Democratic majority.
âHow many times have we been down here giving speeches, and thereâs not a soul in the chamber? Yet this is what it takes to get 435 People in the chamber and have an actual debate,â Roy told the chamber.
âThe American people are watching, and thatâs a good thing. What weâre doing is exercising our rights to vote and have a debate and have a discussion about the future of this country through the decision of choosing a speaker.
âThis is not personal. Itâs not. This is about the future of the country. This is about the direction of the country.â
Republican Infighting
That vote capped a frenzied two days of back-room bargaining and media posturing by McCarthy and his supporters and a small group of dissident populist conservatives who demanded and got a host of reform concessions, but still voted no on the first ballot.
The bottom line for the dissidents was they just donât trust McCarthy to be the agent of change they believe must lead the House in what they are determined to make the last two years of President Joe Bidenâs tenure in the White House.
âI came to a broken and dysfunctional Congress to change it. Advancing the long-standing pecking order one notch has no prospect of doing that. Many donât want to change it,â Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.) posted on Twitter just before the first vote.
âKevin McCarthy is not the right candidate to be Speaker. He has perpetuated the Washington status quo that makes this body one of the most unsuccessful and unpopular institutions in the country. This is not about personality or who has âearnedâ the position, it is about serving the American people. I will not support the status quo,â Bishop continued.
In the final minutes before the new House assembled for the speaker contest, a clearly exasperated and frustrated McCarthy told reporters: âI have the record for the longest speech ever on the floor. I donât have a problem getting a record for the most votes for Speaker, too.â
He was referring to his more than 90-minute December address to the House in opposition to Bidenâs $1.8 trillion omnibus spending bill.
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