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Tag: jim jordan

  • Jim Jordan still facing at least

    Jim Jordan still facing at least

    Rep. Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, still faces an uphill climb to the House speakership, with at least 10 to 20 Republican members who oppose his nomination, CBS News has learned, based on background conversations over the weekend with six key House Republicans and more than a dozen sources familiar with the deliberations. 

    “At least 10 to 20,” one of the House Republicans told CBS News on Sunday, while another added that that Jordan’s support has grown incrementally in recent days but remains soft. 

    While Jordan’s confidants remain optimistic that he can get to the necessary 217 votes Tuesday, when the House is scheduled to bring a vote to the floor, several who are more critical of Jordan privately insisted this weekend that at about a dozen Republicans remain unwilling to support him, due to their frustrations over how Rep. Steve Scalise, Republican of Louisiana, was treated during his speaker bid and their simmering anger over the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy. They also are wary of whether Jordan can handle the intensity of the challenges facing Congress in the coming months. 

    GOP Speaker Meeting Oct 13
    Reps. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, center, and Russ Fulcher, R-Idaho, right, arrive at a House Republican Conference speaker of the house meeting in Longworth Building on Friday, October 13, 2023. 

    Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images


    Jordan’s outside game 

    Jordan has been relying on right-wing groups he has long backed, as well as allies close to former President Donald Trump. He has also counted on the support of activists, such as Amy Kremer, to win over those who were undecided this past weekend. Trump has taken calls about the speaker race but has not weighed in heavily beyond his past endorsement of Jordan, leaving some close to Jordan wondering if he will help close the deal in the coming days in a way that is significant and helpful. 

    Some Trump allies, like former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, have told associates privately that Jordan made a strategic mistake by not bringing a vote to the floor last week. In recent days, others on the right have been urging Jordan to go to the floor this week to expose his critics in front of a national audience. Jordan’s allies have said privately that he did not go to the floor last week because he wanted more time to meet with members. 

    Monday night meeting 

    Sources say Jordan will try to rally GOP members on Monday night, when House Republicans are scheduled to huddle again, arguing it’s time to put this political mess behind them. But with internal GOP questions mounting — not only about Jordan’s character and abilities — but about how he will handle supplemental requests from the Biden administration on aid for Israel and Ukraine, many longtime appropriators and hawks remain concerned about how he would handle those issues. 

    Ohio GOP Rep. Mike Turner, in an appearance on CBS’ “Face the Nation” Sunday, was a bellwether for where many House Republicans stand, according to Republicans involved in the speaker talks. 

    “I think Jim Jordan will be an excellent speaker,” he told moderator Margaret Brennan. “I think he’ll be able to get to 217. If not, we have other leaders in the House. And certainly, if there is a need if the radical, you know, almost just handful of people in the Republican side … to make it for us unable to be able to return to general work on the House, then I think obviously, there will be a deal we’ll have to be done.”

    Deal on Speaker Pro Tempore Patrick Henry?

    If Jordan is unable to secure enough support by Tuesday’s vote, some key Jordan skeptics and veteran Republicans are now preparing to push for a bipartisan deal that would expand the ability of Rep. Patrick McHenry, Republican of North Carolina, to move legislation on Israel and government funding through his current ministerial role as speaker pro tempore.

    McHenry is also being mentioned as a possible alternative to win the speakership outright, should Jordan fail to win on the floor this week. But those talks are fluid and many of his supporters are also hoping that McCarthy might see a revival if Jordan collapses. 

    Other potential rivals 

    Other names that continue to be mentioned by Republicans this past weekend as “backup options” for speaker include Rep. Tom Cole, of Oklahoma; Rep. Elise Stefanik, of New York; Rep. Tom Emmer, of Minnesota; Rep. Kevin Hern, of Oklahoma; Rep. Mike Johnson, of Louisiana; and Rep. Jodey Arrington, of Texas.

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  • Senior House Republican says GOP members ready to block Jordan | CNN Politics

    Senior House Republican says GOP members ready to block Jordan | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    A number of House Republicans are in talks to block Rep. Jim Jordan’s path to the speakership as the Ohio Republican tries to force a floor vote on Tuesday, according to multiple GOP sources.

    One senior Republican House member who is part of the opposition to Jordan told CNN that there he believes there are roughly 40 “no” votes, and that he has personally spoken to 20 members who are willing to go to the floor and block Jordan’s path if the Ohio Republican forces a roll-call vote on Tuesday.

    “The approximately 20 I’ve talked to know we must be prepared,” the member said. “We cannot let the small group dictate to the whole group. They want a minority of the majority to dictate and as a red-blooded American I refuse to be a victim.”

    But another GOP source familiar with the matter says that Jordan has had positive conversations with members and believes by Tuesday evening he will be elected speaker of the House. The source said it was “likely” the vote would still happen on Tuesday and that Jordan may decide to go to multiple ballots on the floor if necessary.

    Republicans are expected to meet behind closed doors Monday evening.

    Yet there is still sizable opposition to Jordan. The GOP member says there are some Republicans who are critics of Jordan and not willing to back him – and there are others angry at the hardliners who took out Kevin McCarthy and sunk Majority Leader Steve Scalise and don’t want to reward those moves by electing Jordan, who is their preferred candidate.

    “I know of many hard nos. …We can’t reward this behavior,” the GOP lawmaker said. “We can’t let a small group be dictators.”

    The Republican conference nominated Jordan as speaker last week after Scalise dropped his bid for the role. Scalise had initially been selected by the conference as its nominee – after he defeated Jordan 113-99 in the conference’s first speaker vote – but more than a dozen Republicans said they would not vote for Scalise, forcing him to withdraw.

    Now Jordan is facing the same problem from Republicans angry at McCarthy’s ouster and a small faction of the conference refusing to get behind Scalise after he won the first vote. After Jordan’s nomination, he held a second, secret vote in the conference on whether Republicans would support him on the floor. Fifty-five Republicans voted no.

    To be elected speaker, a nominee must win the majority of the full House, which is currently 217 votes due to two vacancies. That means Jordan or any other Republican nominee can only afford to lose four GOP votes on the floor if every Democrat votes for House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

    Some of Jordan’s allies have pushed for votes on the floor in order to try to call out the holdouts who aren’t behind the Ohio Republican. But Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas railed against his House GOP colleagues who plan on rallying support for Jordan’s speakership through a public pressure campaign, calling it “the dumbest thing you can do.”

    “That is the dumbest way to support Jordan,” Crenshaw told Jake Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday. “As someone who wants Jim Jordan, the dumbest thing you can do is to continue pissing off those people and entrench them.”

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  • Republicans nominate Jim Jordan for House speaker

    Republicans nominate Jim Jordan for House speaker

    Republicans nominate Jim Jordan for House speaker – CBS News


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    The Republican Conference on Friday nominated Rep. Jim Jordan to be the next speaker of the House, but he must still earn the majority vote in the full chamber. This comes after the previous nominee, Majority Leader Steve Scalise, withdrew his name Thursday due to a lack of support.

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  • Scalise faces a key math problem as he struggles to collect 217 votes for speaker | CNN Politics

    Scalise faces a key math problem as he struggles to collect 217 votes for speaker | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    Majority Leader Steve Scalise is scrambling to lock down the votes to become the next House speaker, but protracted opposition to the Louisiana Republican inside the GOP conference and the numerical realities of the narrowly divided chamber could ultimately derail his bid.

    Several senior Republicans see little path to 217 votes, after Scalise won just 113 votes in the GOP conference, which includes three delegates who don’t have a vote on the House floor. Making up that deficit in just a matter of days is an extremely tall order – plus a number of hard-right Republicans say they are dead-set against Scalise, when he can only afford to lose four GOP votes on the floor. At least 12 GOP lawmakers have said publicly they’ll oppose Scalise’s nomination and more have expressed frustration or skepticism about his leadership, more than enough to sink his bid.

    House GOP members will huddle behind closed doors Thursday afternoon, according to two sources familiar. No phones will be allowed in the meeting.

    Republicans are worried that Scalise is facing grim prospects of becoming speaker, an impasse that threatens to prolong the GOP’s leadership crisis that has left the House paralyzed and unable to move on any legislation.

    Late Wednesday, members of the conference were beginning to weigh how they would handle the potential collapse of his bid, with several GOP sources saying they believe they’d have to consider a new candidate who has yet to run for the speakership.

    Scalise spent Wednesday after the vote meeting individually with GOP members as he and his whip operation tried to convince the holdouts to come around, the sources said. He found some success in the outreach, but it’s not yet clear whether he can win over enough Republicans to overcome the razor-thin GOP House majority.

    Scalise or any other Republican candidate for speaker needs 217 votes to win the speaker’s gavel, a majority of the entire House, meaning they can only afford to lose four Republicans if every member is voting.

    Rep. Jim Jordan, who lost the vote for speaker to Scalise on Wednesday, 113-99, said Thursday he wants Republicans to unite around Scalise. “I do and I’ve been clear about that since yesterday,” Jordan said.

    But pressed on if he would rule out taking the job if Scalise can’t get there, Jordan didn’t give a clear answer. “I will nominate Steve on the floor and I hope we can unite around a speaker,” the Ohio Republican said.

    The opposition to Scalise inside his party has thrown into doubt how Republicans will get out of their speaker conundrum that’s left them simply unable to govern.

    While there was some belief on Capitol Hill that the brutal assault on Israel over the weekend might prompt Republicans to quickly select a leader – House lawmakers were given a classified briefing on Israel Wednesday before the conference vote for speaker – the deep divisions in the conference that led to Kevin McCarthy’s removal last week have now left the quest for a new speaker at a standstill.

    Anger inside the conference is rising.

    “These folks are destroying our conference and apparently want to be in the minority,” said Rep. Don Bacon, who represents a swing Nebraska district. “They don’t respect the customs of the House that have gone on for over two centuries.”

    The House gavels back in at noon Thursday, but there’s no indication Republicans will be ready to vote on a speaker.

    Scalise is facing broad skepticism inside the far-right House Freedom Caucus, a key bloc of Republicans who mostly supported the Trump-backed Jordan for speaker, multiple sources told CNN, citing a general lack of trust with Republican leadership. Scalise has been in leadership years, although he is more conservative than McCarthy.

    Jordan, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, threw his weight behind Scalise following Wednesday’s vote, saying he was encouraging his supporters to do the same. “We need a speaker and Steve is the guy for that. Like I said, I have offered to give a nominating speech for him,” the Ohio Republican told reporters Wednesday afternoon.

    But there was a cohort of lawmakers who expressed staunch opposition to voting for Scalise on the House floor.

    “Well, Leader Scalise won, and it’s not over. I’m still throwing my support behind Jim Jordan for speaker. I’m not going to change my vote now or any time soon on the House floor,” said GOP Rep. Max Miller of Ohio.

    Scalise’s individual outreach did peel off at least one holdout. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, who initially said Wednesday that she would vote for Jordan on the floor, met with Scalise and said afterward she felt “comfortable” enough to support his speaker nomination.

    While she said he did not make specific commitments, he did assure her that he’ll allow her to “aggressively” do her job on the Oversight Committee, which is part of the impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden.

    But Luna said she would only back Scalise for the speakership on the first ballot. If it went to multiple ballots, she said, “we must find a candidate” the conference can unite behind.

    Still, a number of Republicans don’t think that Jordan could be a viable alternative given that he lost to Scalise in the nominating contest, and some Republicans were irritated when he didn’t immediately close ranks behind Scalise.

    “If Scalise were not to make it, the next person got less votes,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida said of Jordan. “And by the way, I think, more controversial. So that would not be a good thing for this place.”

    Rep. Erin Houchin of Indiana said she doesn’t know if “it will be Jordan or Scalise or even someone else at this point. … I think we’re in uncharted territory, and it’s gonna be very hard to predict.”

    Another GOP member said that it would have to be a new candidate altogether, something that would take longer to sort out.

    “Steve is nowhere near 217,” said the Republican member.

    Leaving the floor without a vote Wednesday, interim Speaker Patrick McHenry tried to be optimistic the House GOP conference would solve the impasse soon.

    Asked if there could be a floor vote Thursday, the North Carolina Republican said, “That’s the hope.”

    Could anyone get the 217 votes required? He had the same response: “That’s the hope.”

    This story and headline have been updated to include additional developments.

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  • Fani Willis Blasts Jim Jordan, Again, For Wading Into Trump Case

    Fani Willis Blasts Jim Jordan, Again, For Wading Into Trump Case

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis once again shot down House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) on Wednesday, calling his ongoing attempts to wade into the prosecution of former President Donald Trump “ignorant,” “troubling” and an abuse of power.

    “A charitable explanation of your correspondence is that you are ignorant of the United States and Georgia Constitutions and codes,” Willis wrote in a letter to the lawmaker. “A more troubling explanation is that you are abusing your authority as Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary to attempt to obstruct and interfere with a Georgia criminal prosecution.”

    “We have already written a letter — which I have attached again for your reference — explaining why the legal positions you advance are meritless,” she continued. “Nothing you’ve said in your latest letter changes that fact.”

    Willis and Jordan have exchanged barbs for months after the district attorney indicted Trump and 18 others as part of a vast racketeering investigation, alleging that the former president and his allies engaged in a sweeping conspiracy to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia.

    Jordan, who chairs the powerful Judiciary Committee and remains a devout Trump supporter, demanded Willis turn over a range of documents in the case, to which she responded by accusing the lawmaker of attempting to “intrude” and “interfere” with an active criminal probe.

    “Your letter makes clear that you lack a basic understanding of the law, its practice and the ethical obligations of attorneys generally and prosecutors specifically,” she wrote last month.

    Yet Jordan again asked for documents again a few weeks later, saying the House panel was concerned Willis’ “prosecutorial conduct is geared more toward advancing a political cause and your own notoriety than toward promoting the fair and just administration of the law.”

    The district attorney wasn’t having it.

    “While you may enjoy immunity under the United States Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause, that does not make your behavior any less offensive to the rule of law,” she wrote Wednesday, pointing to a list of other efforts Jordan could pursue that would better serve the public. “I would encourage you to focus your attention on those issues, which would make life better for the American people.”

    Read Willis’ full letter below.

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  • House Republicans nominate Steve Scalise as next speaker

    House Republicans nominate Steve Scalise as next speaker

    House Republicans nominate Steve Scalise as next speaker – CBS News


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    Following Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s historic ouster last week as House speaker, House Republicans on Wednesday nominated House Majority Leader Steve Scalise to replace him. However, Scalise still needs enough votes from the full House to secure the position.

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  • House Republicans unsure how quickly they can elect speaker

    House Republicans unsure how quickly they can elect speaker

    House Republicans unsure how quickly they can elect speaker – CBS News


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    Republican lawmakers on Wednesday selected Majority Leader Steve Scalise as their nominee for speaker of the House, but a floor vote remains in a state of suspended animation as Scalise works to build support in the divided conference. CBS News congressional correspondent Nikole Killion has more. Plus, CBS News foreign correspondent Imtiaz Tyab discusses the latest on the Israel-Hamas war.

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  • Steve Scalise, GOP’s Pick for Speaker, Still Has a Floor Fight Ahead

    Steve Scalise, GOP’s Pick for Speaker, Still Has a Floor Fight Ahead

    After a week of leaderless chaos in the House of Representatives, Republicans took the first step back toward normalcy on Wednesday afternoon. In a secret ballot vote of 113 to 99, Steve Scalise triumphed over Jim Jordan to secure his party’s nomination for Speaker.

    Scalise’s path to victory was seen as largely cleared earlier in the day when the Republican caucus knocked down a proposed rule change that would have required either candidate to secure 217 votes before a full House vote. Instead, candidates just needed a simple majority of the conference to move forward. “We have a lot of work to do,” Scalise told reporters shortly after the vote.

    Scalise’s nomination was applauded by a number of Republicans as they exited the meeting. “I say we unify as a party to get the Speaker designee elected as an official Speaker of the House,” Michael McCaul told reporters, noting the burgeoning crisis in the Middle East. “We can’t afford this dysfunction, the nation can’t afford this…. We need a Speaker in the chair. We’re in dangerous times right now.”

    Even Congressman Matt Gaetz, one of the leading architects of McCarthy’s ouster, applauded Scalise’s victory. “I’m excited for him. I can’t wait to go vote for Steve Scalise,” the Florida congressman said. “Long live Speaker Scalise.” Tim Burchett, who also voted to remove McCarthy, echoed the unity message. “I’m going to vote for Scalise on the floor.” But the Speaker fight is far from over. Doubts remain that Scalise can muster enough support to actually win the gavel. Rather, Republicans are bracing for a redux of Kevin McCarthy’s drawn-out fight for the Speakership back in January, just with a different main character.

    As they exited Wednesday’s vote, a number of lawmakers who cast their ballots for Jordan told reporters they planned to do so again, on the House floor; Max Miller was among them. “I don’t think I’m the only member of Congress who feels this way…actually, I know I’m not the only one,” Miller said. “You’re going to see that play out on the House floor.”

    When asked by reporters whether he would vote for Scalise on the floor, Jordan dodged the question. He said, “The conference is still divided,” and added that he hopes “it can come together.” (It was later reported that Jordan would back Scalise.)

    The realities of any candidate’s rocky road to 217 votes was thrust into stark relief over the past few days, particularly following the candidate forum—in which both Jordan and Scalise presented their visions for the Speakership—on the eve of the conference vote. Just before 5 p.m. on Tuesday evening, the scene outside the Ways and Means Committee room in the Longworth House office building was chaotic. The media melee was three rows deep in certain spots. At various points, the sound of applause drifted out from behind the closed doors as Republicans sought to clean up a mess entirely of their own making.

    Exactly one week earlier the GOP conference made history when a rogue faction of eight voted to oust McCarthy as House Speaker. The intent was to inch closer toward crowning the next House leader, but as lawmakers trickled out it appeared that House Republicans were no closer to coalescing around a McCarthy successor than they were in the immediate aftermath of the California congressman getting unceremoniously stripped of the Speaker’s gavel. “I don’t know how the hell you get to 218,” Troy Nehls told reporters as he left the meeting, referencing the vote threshold to elect the next House leader, barring any vacancies. Nehls predicted a potentially long week ahead, noting the deep divisions within the party.

    Abigail Tracy

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  • Republicans appear no closer to choosing a new leader after candidate forum

    Republicans appear no closer to choosing a new leader after candidate forum

    House Republicans remained unable to agree on who should be the next speaker, one week after Speaker Kevin McCarthy was removed, with lawmakers unable to coalesce around a new leader in a stalemate that threatens to keep Congress partly shuttered indefinitely.

    On Tuesday evening, two leading contenders for the gavel, Majority Leader Steve Scalise and Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, outlined their visions behind closed doors at a lengthy candidate forum. Rep. Mike Garcia, of California, estimated that around 30-40 House Republicans asked questions of the two during the forum.But Jordan and Scalise appeared to be splitting the vote among their Republican colleagues.

    Rep. Thomas Massie, of Kentucky, said that he asked both candidates what they would do on the eve of November 17, when the current continuing resolution to fund the government expires. He said Jordan told members he would act before the deadline and push a long-term continuing resolution that would trigger a 1% cut in funding later. 

    Lawmakers said Scalise emphasized pressuring the Senate to take action on House-passed appropriations bills. The House has so far passed four appropriations bills, but they contain cuts that Democrats and the Biden administration are sure to reject, as well social policy riders that Democrats on the House Appropriations Committee said were “irrelevant” and “harmful.

    McCarthy, meanwhile, who had openly positioned himself to reclaim the gavel he just lost, told his colleagues during the private meeting not to nominate him this time. Instead, he read a poem from Mother Teresa and delivered a prayer.

    “I don’t know how the hell you get to 218,” Rep. Troy Nehls, of Texas, said afterward, referring to the majority vote typically needed to seize the gavel. “It could be a long week.”

    House Republicans took the majority aspiring to operate as a team, and run government more like a business, but have drifted far from that goal. Just 10 months in power, the historic ouster of their House speaker — a first in the U.S. — and the prolonged infighting it has unleashed are undercutting the Republicans’ ability to govern at a time of crisis at home and abroad.

    Now, as House Republicans push ahead toward snap elections Wednesday aimed at finding a new nominee for speaker, the hard-right coalition of lawmakers that ousted McCarthy has shown what an oversized role a few lawmakers can have in choosing the successor.

    “This is a hard conference to lead,” said Rep. Steve Womack, of Arkansas. “A lot of free agents.”

    Both Scalise and Jordan are working furiously to shore up support. Both are easily winning over dozens of supporters and could win the majority of Republicans, about 110 votes.

    But it’s unclear if either Scalise or Jordan can amass the 217 votes that would be needed in a floor vote to overcome opposition from Democrats. There are currently two vacancies in the 435-seat House.

    Many Republicans want to prevent the spectacle of a messy House floor fight like the grueling January brawl when McCarthy became speaker.

    “We’re in a similar situation that we were back in January,” said Doug Heye, a former Republican leadership aide, adding the political optics of the feud look “terrible” to American voters.

    Some have proposed a rules change that Rep. Patrick McHenry, of North Carolina, the interim speaker pro tempore, is considering to ensure a majority vote during closed balloting Wednesday before the nominee is presented for a full floor vote.

    McCarthy himself appeared to agree with a consensus approach. “They shouldn’t come out of there until they decide that they have enough votes for whoever they bring to the floor,” McCarthy said.

    But short of a rules change, Republican lawmakers would be expected to agree to a majority-wins process — whichever candidate wins the internal private vote would be given the full backing of the Republicans on the House floor.

    It’s no guarantee — with trust low among House Republicans and tensions high, those normal protocols could be challenged. Both Scalise and Jordan indicated they would support the eventual nominee, lawmakers said. But many lawmakers remained undecided.

    “I am not thrilled with either choice right now,” said Rep. Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican who voted to oust McCarthy.

    While both are conservatives from the right flank, neither Scalise nor Jordan is the heir apparent to McCarthy.

    Scalise as the second-ranking Republican would be next in line for the gavel and is seen as a hero among colleagues for having survived severe injuries from a mass shooting during a congressional baseball practice in 2017. Now battling blood cancer, the Louisianan is not a clear lock.

    “We’re going to go get this done tomorrow, and the House is going to get back to work,” Scalise said as he exited the meeting.

    Jordan is a high-profile political firebrand known for his close alliance with Donald Trump, particularly when the then-president was working to overturn the results of the 2020 election, leading to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Trump has backed Jordan’s bid for the gavel.

    Scalise and Jordan presented similar views at the forum about cutting spending and securing the southern border with Mexico, top Republican priorities.

    Several lawmakers, including Rep. Matt Gaetz, of Florida, who engineered McCarthy’s removal, said they would be willing to support either Scalise or Jordan.

    “I think it’s a competitive race for speaker because we’ve got two greats,” said Rep. Andy Barr, of Kentucky.

    Barr said he was working to help secure votes for Scalise, but would be comfortable with either candidate.

    Others though, particularly more centrist conservative Republicans from districts that are narrowly split between the parties, are holding out for another choice.

    “Personally, I’m still with McCarthy,” said Rep. David Valadao, a Republican who represents a California district not far from the former speaker’s district.

    “We’ll see how that plays out, but I do know a large percentage of the membership wants to be there with him as well.”

    McCarthy headed into the evening forum insisting he was not, at the moment, a candidate for speaker.

    But the California Republican gave a nod to his own short track record as speaker — being ousted by the far-right flank after he led Congress to approve a stopgap spending bill to prevent a disruptive federal government shutdown.

    “I think it’s important whoever takes that job is willing to risk the job for doing what’s right for the American public,” McCarthy said.

    For now, McHenry is effectively in charge. He has shown little interest in expanding his power beyond the role he was assigned — an interim leader tasked with ensuring the election of the next speaker.

    The role was created in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to ensure the continuity of government. McHenry’s name was at the top of a list submitted by McCarthy when he became speaker in January.

    While some Republicans and Democrats are open to empowering McHenry the longer he holds the temporary position, that seems unlikely as the speaker’s fight drags on.

    McHenry told reporters it’s “my goal” to keep to the schedule to have hold a House speaker election on Wednesday. He quickly gaveled the House in and out of a brief session Tuesday, with no business conducted.

    Ellis Kim contributed to this report.

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  • House Republicans Have Opened the Gaetz of Hell

    House Republicans Have Opened the Gaetz of Hell

    Well, House Republicans should have been careful what they wished for. With Kevin McCarthy vacated, largely thanks to Matt Gaetz (with a possible assist from Donald Trump), Republicans are now in complete and utter disarray. McCarthy’s replacement will need to garner 217 votes to be confirmed. But on Monday, after a private conference meeting on who that might be, it quickly became clear that none of McCarthy’s possible successors would pass the muster. Which, believe it or not, could put McCarthy right back where he started.

    One reason for this is geopolitics. On Saturday morning, Americans woke up to news of an invasion by Hamas and subsequent carnage in Israel and Gaza—the deadliest in many decades. Israel is, of course, America’s closest ally in the region. And that’s one of the very few things that both parties seem to agree on. But the governing body that controls the purse, i.e., the House of Representatives, is currently without a leader and is instead being governed by Speaker pro tempore named Patrick McHenry, who is most famous for not standing on a plastic crate and wearing an adorable bow tie. Does McHenry have the same powers that an elected Speaker does? Probably not, but no one really knows for sure because the House hasn’t filed a motion to vacate since 1910 and no Speaker, before McCarthy, ever got removed in a floor vote.

    It also doesn’t help that support for McCarthy’s reinstallment may be picking up. Representatives John Duarte and Carlos Gimenez have, against all logic, said they will only entertain a McCarthy Speakership, according to Punchbowl’s Jake Sherman. And the former Speaker, for his part, has promised to “allow the conference to make any decision” on his replacement—even if that means reclaiming the gavel, which presents a big turd to the punch bowl for the two front-runners. One of those front-runners is the jacketless Jim Jordan, a man whose brainless rage fueled the national embarrassment known as the Benghazi probes and is now fixated on so-called “weaponization” of government. Republican strategist Rick Wilson described him to me on my podcast, Fast Politics, as looking like he has “rabies,” which is indelicate, sure, but may explain why he’s so removed from reality. In any case, Jordan does not have the polish of a Paul Ryan, or even the likes of McCarthy or Trump. And that’s a problem, because one of the biggest responsibilities of being Speaker is fundraising; it’s hard to imagine high-net-worth Republican donors having the same goodwill with Jordan as they did with his slightly more sophisticated predecessor.

    But beyond that, Jordan would need the 18 vulnerable blue-state representatives to vote for him. That is, members like Mike Lawler, who represents New York’s 17th, a D-plus-three congressional district that he won by less than 2,000 votes. And they might not be so inclined to support Jordan considering his distinguished past of election denial, or his involvement in controversies like the Ohio State University sexual abuse scandal. Putting Jordan in the job could cross the Rubicon way past the point where the GOP could even pretend to be genteel.

    The other front-runner is Majority Leader Steve Scalise who allegedly once called himselfDavid Duke without the baggage.” He is number two in the Republican congressional leadership and seems, at least on the face of it, way less dramatic and crazy than Jordan. (Though Scalise, too, is an election-denier.) But while seeming less crazy may help Republicans in their quixotic quest to keep the House, it won’t appeal to the burn-it-all-down caucus, whose support is unfortunately vital in the race.

    Which could leave Republicans stuck with McCarthy—a guy who presumably considers himself to be a moderate but for sure as hell didn’t act like one during his nine-month Speakership. He launched a Biden impeachment inquiry without a House floor vote, despite promising otherwise; tried to cut government spending by up to 30%; and empowered both Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene by putting her on Homeland Security and white nationalist adjacent dentist Paul Gosar by putting him on House Oversight. Sure, maybe McCarthy speaks in less extreme terms than Jordan, but his political philosophy appears driven by a fearful subservience to the MAGA wing.

    For Democrats, it might actually be better politically to have a Speaker who is unapologetically MAGA, presenting a clear contrast. Of course, a Jim Jordan Speakership would be a nightmare for democracy, for political discourse, for many of the values that I hold dear. But Jordan winning 217 votes would make clear that there are zero moderates left in the Republican caucus, that literally every member of the house is a right-wing zealot.

    Things are, in other words, looking pretty bleak. As the carnage in the Middle East dominates the news cycle—and the House’s fiscal responsibilities come into immense focus—it’s unclear how the party will escape from that sand trap, whether it’s by electing a hard-line MAGA replacement who endangers their control of the House or by reelecting McCarthy, who could very well be vacated once more. What is certain amid all the bickering, backstabbing, and nail-biting is that the only member of Congress who is presumably happy about this House of horrors is the Gaetz of Hell.

    Molly Jong-Fast

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  • Congress paralyzed on Israel without House speaker

    Congress paralyzed on Israel without House speaker

    Congress paralyzed on Israel without House speaker – CBS News


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    Political leaders in the U.S. have vowed to support Israel after the Hamas militant group launched a deadly attack on Saturday, but Congress can’t do anything about the situation until a new House speaker is put in place. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane has more.

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  • Donald Trump Endorses Staunch Ally Jim Jordan for House Speaker

    Donald Trump Endorses Staunch Ally Jim Jordan for House Speaker

    Ending speculation that he would actively seek the newly-vacated House speakership, former President Donald Trump endorsed Ohio Representative Jim Jordan, the powerful chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, for the top job on Friday, jumping into what for now is a two-way race between Jordan and Louisiana Representative Steve Scalise, who currently serves as House Majority Leader.

    Dubbing Jordan a “STAR,” Trump called the Ohio congressman “STRONG on Crime, Borders, our Military/Vets, & 2nd Amendment,” adding that he “will be a GREAT Speaker of the House, & has my Complete & Total Endorsement!”

    So far, only Jordan and Scalise have officially jumped into the race that began on Tuesday when California Representative Kevin McCarthy was ousted from the speakership—a historic first.

    Jordan, a founding member of the House Freedom Caucus, is a hardcore Trump loyalist and is a divisive figure within the GOP. From his congressional leadership perch, he has launched investigations into the Biden family and is one of the leaders of the ongoing impeachment inquiry into the president.

    It’s unclear how much the endorsement will actually help Jordan, as the GOP needs to unite a fractious caucus before the speaker vote next week. “It likely hurts more than helps,” one GOP lawmaker, speaking anonymously, told Axios Friday. “Likely Jordan accelerates getting the votes he was going to get anyway but hardens those he wasn’t getting faster.” Another said Trump’s endorsement “works both ways. Some will be impressed, some are sick of him and would like him to stay in Florida.”

    A conservative lawmaker who supports Jordan told Axios that “the real question is can Republicans in districts Biden won vote for a Trump-endorsed Speaker?” noting that House members in vulnerable seats are going to have to publicly cast votes on the House floor—one that could potentially haunt them in 2024.

    On Friday, McCarthy, who has said he will not seek the job again, declined to say who he might support as his replacement. Asked for his opinion about Trump’s endorsement, McCarthy simply noted that “only members vote” in the speaker election. “I think the members can sit down, and they can make the decision,” he said.

    McCarthy added that Jordan and Scalise sought his advice before a forum for speaker candidates next Tuesday. “They’re both good friends,” he told reporters. “I’ve talked to both of them.” The House will vote on Wednesday.

    Florida Representative Matt Gaetz, who led the charge against McCarthy, has praised both Jordan and Scalise as good options. Either, he said Wednesday, would be a “monumental upgrade” from McCarthy. According to The Washington Post, Speaker Scalise or Speaker Jordan would be the most ideologically conservative Republican to hold the post in recent history.

    Jack McCordick

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  • Liz Cheney Warns On What Jim Jordan Becoming Speaker Could Mean For The Constitution

    Liz Cheney Warns On What Jim Jordan Becoming Speaker Could Mean For The Constitution

    Former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) on Thursday didn’t mince her words about Rep. Jim Jordan, the Ohio Republican who is now running for the speaker’s gavel following the showdown that saw Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) voted out.

    In a speech at the University of Minnesota, the former vice chair of the House Select Committee tasked with investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection said Jordan was the leader among those who were aware of former President Donald Trump’s plans to cling on to power despite losing the 2020 election.

    “Jim Jordan knew more about what Donald Trump had planned for January 6th than any other member of the House of Representatives,” Cheney said. “Jim Jordan was involved, was part of the conspiracy in which Donald Trump was engaged as he attempted to overturn the election.”

    While Cheney said she didn’t expect Jordan to win the upcoming contest, she said his potential ascension to the position would send a strong message about where the GOP’s allegiance lies.

    “If they were to decide that, there would no longer be any possible way to argue that a group of elected Republicans could be counted on to defend the Constitution,” she said.

    Jordan has secured the endorsement of Trump, who continues to exert influence on a big chunk of the Republican caucus.

    “He will be a GREAT Speaker of the House,” Trump said of Jordan in a post on his Truth Social platform.

    Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) is the only other member so far to join the contest, but others are also expected to announce their candidacies.

    Cheney also weighed in on McCarthy’s ouster as speaker. She said Democrats made a “principled” decision in choosing not to save McCarthy’s job given his track record, citing McCarthy’s decision to continue abiding and apologizing for Trump. All present 208 Democrats, along with eight Republicans, voted for McCarthy to be removed.

    Cheney said, “I think they did exactly the right thing, and it was a courageous show of leadership.”

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  • Trump endorses Jim Jordan for House speaker

    Trump endorses Jim Jordan for House speaker

    Who will get enough support to be speaker?


    Will Steve Scalise or Jim Jordan get enough votes to become House speaker?

    03:56

    Former President Donald Trump on Thursday night endorsed Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio for the newly-vacated House speaker role.

    In a post to his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote that the 59-year-old Jordan “has my complete & total endorsement.”

    Jordan has been one of Trump’s biggest congressional allies. In January 2021 — just days after the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection and right before he left office — Trump awarded Jordan the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.  

    In his post Thursday, the president lauded Jordan for his college wrestling career and his education credentials.

    Both Jordan, who is chairman of the powerful House Judiciary Committee, and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana announced their bids for House speaker Wednesday.

    A vote is expected next Tuesday in the House, which has been in recess since McCarthy’s removal. Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina is currently serving as speaker pro tempore.

    This comes after the House, in a historic move, voted by a margin of 216 to 210 on Tuesday to oust House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Eight far-right Republicans joined all Democrats in voting to remove McCarthy, marking the first time in American history that a House speaker has been removed in a no-confidence vote.

    Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, a major critic of McCarthy, forced the vote when he put forth the motion to vacate the office of speaker. Gaetz said his decision to put forth the motion came after McCarthy helped pass a bipartisan 45-day stopgap bill last weekend to prevent an impending government shutdown.

    Some far-right Republicans have called for Trump to be nominated as House speaker. Under congressional rules, the House speaker does not have to be a member of Congress. However, the House has never had a non-member in the speaker’s role in its 234-year history.

    Melissa Quinn and Kathryn Watson contributed to this report. 

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  • Trump Endorses Jim Jordan For House Speaker

    Trump Endorses Jim Jordan For House Speaker

    Former President Donald Trump endorsed Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) to become the next speaker of the House early Friday morning, saying the lawmaker was “respected by all” and had earned his “complete and total endorsement.”

    “Congressman Jim Jordan has been a STAR long before making his very successful journey to Washington, D.C.,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “He is STRONG on Crime, Borders, our Military/Vets, & 2nd Amendment. Jim, his wife, Polly, & family are outstanding – He will be a GREAT Speaker of the House, & has my Complete & Total Endorsement!”

    Jordan is well-regarded in the GOP, but his combative style and fierce defense of the president could pose an issue for some of his more moderate colleagues. He chairs the powerful House Judiciary Committee and is a champion of the far-right faction of the Republican Party.

    Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) first hinted earlier Thursday he had had a “great conversation” with Trump about the process to replace former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who was ousted in a shocking turn of fortune this week. McCarthy was voted out of the speakership on Tuesday after eight far-right Republicans — led by Rep. Matt Gaetz (Fla.) — voted to strip him of his gavel, a first such ouster in the chamber’s history.

    “He is endorsing Jim Jordan, and I believe Congress should listen to the leader of our party,” Nehls wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “I fully support Jim Jordan for Speaker of the House.”

    The endorsement will surely bolster Jordan’s bid as Trump ― who remains the frontrunner in the 2024 race for the GOP nomination for president ― maintains a vice grip on many in the party. Some Republicans, however, have expressed doubt he could secure enough votes to become speaker.

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  • 10/4: CBS Evening News

    10/4: CBS Evening News

    10/4: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan to run for House speaker; Apple pushes out software update to address overheating in new iPhone 15

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  • Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan to run for House speaker

    Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan to run for House speaker

    Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan to run for House speaker – CBS News


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    Following the historic vote to remove House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Reps. Steve Scalise and Jim Jordan announced bids to replace him. Scalise is the House majority leader, while Jordan chairs the powerful House Judiciary Committee. Scott MacFarlane has more.

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  • The House Speaker Might Change—But GOP Dysfunction Will Stay the Same

    The House Speaker Might Change—But GOP Dysfunction Will Stay the Same

    Behind Kevin McCarthy’s frustration, one could almost detect some measure of relief: Sure, he’d just lost his dream job—but perhaps suffering one historic humiliation would be better than dealing with the daily embarrassments and indignities that come with leading this increasingly dysfunctional GOP. “I believe I can continue to fight, maybe in a different manner,” he said after his gavel was taken away Tuesday. “I will not run for speaker again.”

    The question for the conference now: Who would?

    “It’s one thing to burn the building down,” as Oklahoma Republican Frank Lucas put it to Politico. “It’s another to put it back together again.”

    That “building,” as it were, was more of a house of cards, always on the verge of collapsing since its construction in January. McCarthy, desperate to secure the speakership that eluded him in 2016, cut a series of concessions to the far-right. That dramatically weakened his power, putting his job security in major jeopardy several times over the course of ten months. But on Tuesday, they finally did him in. “We are breaking the fever and we should elect a speaker who is better,” said Matt Gaetz, who led the motion to vacate against McCarthy.

    But it’s unclear who that will be. Not only is it hard to say who actually wants this job; it’s difficult to imagine a candidate that this Republican madhouse could actually unite around. There’s McCarthy’s deputy, Steve Scalise, who has already started working the phones but is in treatment for blood cancer. There’s Jim Jordan, the far-right firebrand-turned-McCarthy ally, who is being courted by conservatives but has previously said he is not interested in the gig. There’s even been the obligatory talk, among some House extremists, about nominating Donald Trump for the role: “President Trump, the greatest president of my lifetime, has a proven record of putting America first, and will make the House great again,” Texas Republican Troy Nehls said. That would seem a remote possibility, considering Trump has said before that he would not want to be House speaker and suggested Tuesday that he was upset at the GOP “infighting.” But Fox News’ Sean Hannity—a close ally of the former president—has started beating the drum, reporting Tuesday night that “some House Republicans” were interested in drafting Trump, and that Trump himself “might be open” to it.

    Could that actually lead to Speaker Trump? Presumably not, especially since his schedule is already jam-packed with presidential campaigning and court appearances for his various criminal and civil trials. But we’re also in uncharted waters here: No speaker until McCarthy has ever been ousted this way. Who can say with confidence where, exactly, this all goes next—for the now-former speaker, who continues to blame everyone but himself for his downfall, and for the chamber as a whole?

    The only sure thing, perhaps, is that GOP will continue to be mired in dysfunction—a conference of extremists held captive by its most attention-hungry member. McCarthy assumed the position in January after a wild fifteen rounds of voting. Ten months later, the party will have to elect another speaker—but with even less consensus, and even more disorder. “Nobody knows what’s going to happen next, including all the people that voted to vacate,” as House Rules Chairman Tom Cole told CNN. “They have no alternative at this point. So it’s just simply a vote for chaos.”

    Eric Lutz

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  • Fani Willis All but Calls Jim Jordan a Moron in Scathing Letter About Prosecuting Trump

    Fani Willis All but Calls Jim Jordan a Moron in Scathing Letter About Prosecuting Trump

    Jordan does not yet appear to have responded to the tip.

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  • Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis accuses Jim Jordan of

    Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis accuses Jim Jordan of

    Washington — Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis issued a sharply worded response to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan of Ohio on Thursday, accusing him of trying to obstruct the prosecution of the racketeering case against former President Donald Trump.

    Jordan, a Trump ally, said last month the committee was launching an investigation into whether the prosecutor coordinated with federal officials when indicting Trump and 18 other defendants for alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia. All of the defendants have pleaded not guilty.

    In response, Willis told Jordan that his request for information on the case, including details about any communications between her office and the Biden administration, was an “unjustified and illegal intrusion into an open state criminal prosecution.” She argued that Congress lacks the jurisdiction to request information about the state’s criminal case into Trump and his co-defendants. 

    “Your attempt to invoke congressional authority to intrude upon and interfere with an active criminal case in Georgia is flagrantly at odds with the Constitution,” she wrote in the letter obtained by CBS News. “The defendants in this case have been charged under state law with committing state crimes. There is absolutely no support for Congress purporting to second guess or somehow supervise an ongoing Georgia criminal investigation and prosecution.” 

    Willis said the goal of Jordan’s inquiry was “to advance outrageous partisan misrepresentations,” adding that she would not be “bullied and threatened” by members of Congress or others. She said his allegations that the case Trump was politically motivated “are unfounded.” 

    “Chairman Jordan, I tell people often ‘deal with reality or reality will deal with you.’ It is time that you deal with some basic realities,” she said, listing off a number of those “realities.” 

    “Those who wish to avoid felony charges in Fulton County, Georgia — including violations of Georgia RICO law — should not commit felonies in Fulton County, Georgia,” she said. 

    Jordan also sought information on the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office’s use of federal funds. Willis said her office has used federal grant funding for “its intended purposes” and warned any attempts to defund her office would be “vengeful, uncalled for legislative action” that would “impose serious harm” on Fulton County citizens.

    Willis also shared several racist and violent threats that have been made against her and her staff as a result of the investigation. 

    “YOU TOUCH ANYONE ATTACHED TO TRUMP & WE WILL BURN YOUR CITY TO THE GROUND WITH YOU IN IT,” read one of the less explicit messages reviewed by CBS News. 

    Willis encouraged the panel to consider directing the Justice Department to investigate the threats. 

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