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  • Who are the 9 Republicans running for House speaker? Here are the candidates

    Who are the 9 Republicans running for House speaker? Here are the candidates

    Nine Republican lawmakers have tossed their hats into the ring to be considered for speaker of the House. 

    House Republicans have been working to elect a speaker since Rep. Kevin McCarthy was ousted at the start of the month. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise withdrew his candidacy on Oct. 12 after receiving the nomination on Oct. 11. Rep. Jim Jordan was dropped as the nominee Friday after he lost a third ballot for the speakership. 

    Who are the nine candidates for speaker of the House?

    Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York said there was a noon deadline on Sunday for representatives to announce their candidacies for speaker. 

    The candidates who met that deadline are Reps. Jack Berman, Byron Donalds, Tom Emmer, Kevin Hern, Mike Johnson, Dan Meuser, Gary Palmer, Austin Scott and Pete Sessions. 

    Republicans will meet Monday evening to discuss potential candidates, with an internal vote set for Tuesday morning, according to interim Speaker Rep. Patrick McHenry.

    All of the candidates, with the exception of Reps. Emmer and Scott, voted to decertify the 2020 election in the hours after the Capitol Insurrection. 

    Here is a little bit more about the lawmakers running for speaker.

    Jack Bergman

    Rep. Jack Bergman
    Rep. Jack Bergman (R-MI) 

    Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


    The Michigan representative announced his candidacy on Friday. 

    “My hat is in the ring, and I feel confident I can win the votes where others could not,” he said. “I have no special interests to serve; I’m only in this to do what’s best for our Nation and to steady the ship for the 118th Congress.”

    Bergman, a retired Marine Corps lieutenant general and businessman, touted his lack of political experience when he first ran in 2016.

    Byron Donalds

    U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL)
    U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) 

    Byron Donalds


     The Florida representative has been backed by fellow Florida lawmakers Reps. Cory Mills and Mario Diaz-Balart. Rep. Donalds garnered some support during a speaker election in January, which McCarthy ultimately won. Donalds announced his candidacy on Friday. 

    “My sole focus will be on securing our border, funding our government responsibly, advancing a conservative vision for the House of Representatives and the American people, and expanding our Republican majority,” he said.

    Tom Emmer

    U.S. House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN)
    U.S. House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN) 

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images


    The Minnesota representative, a close ally of Rep. McCarthy, had declined to run to replace McCarthy as speaker earlier this month. He announced his candidacy on Saturday. 

    “The American people elected us to deliver on a conservative agenda that secures our border, stops reckless spending, and holds Joe Biden accountable. We cannot afford to fail them,” he said. “I’m running for Speaker of the House to bring our conference together and get back to work.”

    Emmer is the current majority whip.

    Kevin Hern

    Rep. Kevin Hern (R-OK)
    Rep. Kevin Hern (R-OK) 

    Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


    The Oklahoma representative chairs the conservative Republican Study Committee. He announced his candidacy on Friday. 

    “We just had two Speaker Designates go down. We must unify and do it fast. I’ve spoken to every Member of the Conference over the last few weeks. We need a different type of leader who has a proven track record of success, which is why I’m running for Speaker of the House.

    Hern has been a member of Congress since 2018. Prior to that, he worked as a businessman, owning two dozen McDonald’s franchise locations.

    Mike Johnson

    Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA)
    Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) 

    Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


    The Louisiana representative was first elected in 2016. He serves as vice chairman of the House Republican Conference. Rep. Johnson announced his candidacy on Saturday. 

    “At this critical juncture, our House Republican majority must provide principled leadership,” he said. “It is our duty to chart a new path, and answer with clarity and conviction who we are, why we are here, and what we are fighting for.”

    Johnson is an attorney and a former radio host.

    Dan Meuser

    U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-PA)
    U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-PA) 

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images)


    The Pennsylvania representative has served in the House since 2019. On Friday, he wrote on social media that should he decide to run, he would be focused on politics of inclusion. 

    “It’s time to get back to work and fight for a fiscally responsible budget, promote energy dominance, secure our border, protect our national security, weed out corruption, and earn the trust of the American people,” Meuser said. 

    Gary Palmer

    Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala)
    Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala)

    Nathan Howard/Getty Images


    The Alabama representative, a member of the House since 2015, currently serves as the chairman of the Republican Policy Committee. He supported Jordan as the nominee for speaker.

    Palmer previously worked as president of a conservative think tank in Alabama.

    Austin Scott

    Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.)
    Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.)

    Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via Getty Images


    The Georgia representative has served in the House since 2011. He announced his candidacy for speaker on Friday.

    “If we are going to be the majority we need to act like the majority, and that means we have to do the right things the right way,” he said. “I supported and voted for Rep. Jim Jordan to be the Speaker of the House. Now that he has withdrawn I am running again to be the Speaker of the House.”

    Scott owned and operated an insurance brokerage firm for nearly 20 years.

    Pete Sessions

    Rep. Pete Sessions
    Rep. Pete SessionsRep. Pete Sessions

    Alex Wong/Getty Images


    The Texas representative previously chaired the House Rules Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee. Rep. Sessions announced his candidacy on Friday. 

    “Congressman Sessions believes he can forge a positive path as a conservative leader who can unite the Conference,” his office said in a statement.

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  • Jim Jordan dropped as nominee for House speaker as GOP stalemate continues

    Jim Jordan dropped as nominee for House speaker as GOP stalemate continues

    Jim Jordan dropped as nominee for House speaker as GOP stalemate continues – CBS News


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    After failing to earn a majority on the House floor, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio was dropped as the nominee for House speaker Friday by the Republican Conference. Nearly three weeks after the historic vote to remove former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Republicans are unable to unify behind a successor. Scott MacFarlane has the latest.

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  • House speaker vote live updates: Jordan’s office says third speaker vote set for Friday morning

    House speaker vote live updates: Jordan’s office says third speaker vote set for Friday morning

    Washington — Rep. Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, who has shown no sign of giving up his bid to be speaker, despite two failed rounds of voting, is holding a news conference at 8 a.m. Friday. There has been no clear evidence so far that he can convert enough of the 22 Republicans who voted against him Wednesday to prevail in the next round of voting, which will take place at 10 a.m. Friday.

    That number is far higher than the four GOP votes he can afford to lose if all House lawmakers show up and vote for a candidate.

    Jordan said Thursday, “I plan to go to the floor and get the votes and win this race.” But no vote was scheduled that day, though he met with the holdouts late Thursday afternoon. He said he hoped to find a way to “get unified,” “move forward and begin to work for the American people.” 

    Rep. Carlos Gimenez, Republican of Florida, who voted against Jordan in both rounds, said he hasn’t changed his mind, and it seemed no one else had either. 

    “We’re still in the same spot,” Gimenez said. “He doesn’t have the votes to be speaker.” 

    Jordan backed a plan to temporarily expand the power of the interim speaker until early January, but he was forced to reverse course by fellow GOP lawmakers Thursday.

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  • Global divisions deepen amid Israel-Hamas war

    Global divisions deepen amid Israel-Hamas war

    Global divisions deepen amid Israel-Hamas war – CBS News


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    While President Biden has affirmed U.S. support for Israel, Russia and China have called for a cease-fire. Steve Inskeep, host of NPR’s “Morning Edition,” joins CBS News to discuss what we can learn from Abraham Lincoln’s presidency about today’s divisions.

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  • Jordan vows to press on with House speaker vote after GOP rejects interim plan

    Jordan vows to press on with House speaker vote after GOP rejects interim plan

    McHenry became speaker pro tempore — or “for the time being” — when the seat was vacated by the vote to oust Kevin McCarthy on Oct. 3.

    The Constitution says nothing about the authority of the House speaker or what happens when the position is vacant. The process for replacing the speaker is instead laid out in the House rules, a set of procedures and protocols adopted every two years at the beginning of a new Congress.

    The relevant section governing a vacancy in the speakership is known as House Rule 1, Clause 8, and was first enacted to ensure the continuity of government in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. None of the provisions of the rule directly envision the situation the House currently finds itself in — that is, a vacancy prompted by a vote to remove the speaker, not illness or incapacitation — but the rule does offer some insight into McHenry’s authority.

    After McCarthy was elected, he drafted a secret list of names of members who should act in his stead should a vacancy arise, under a process established in Rule 1. McHenry was apparently at the top of that list and was designated to “act as” the speaker pro tempore.

    The rule says this about McHenry’s authority:

    In the case of a vacancy in the Office of Speaker, the next Member on the list … shall act as Speaker pro tempore until the election of a Speaker or a Speaker pro tempore. Pending such election the Member acting as Speaker pro tempore may exercise such authorities of the Office of Speaker as may be necessary and appropriate to that end.

    What exactly “that end” refers to — the election of a new speaker, or exercising the speaker’s authorities — is subject to debate. McHenry and some scholars have interpreted it to mean that he can only take actions necessary to elect a permanent speaker. Others, including McCarthy, have said McHenry already has all the powers of a permanent speaker and doesn’t need the approval of the House to exercise them.

    In any event, McHenry’s interpretation seems to have prevailed, and the House has the power to determine what happens next. The various proposals for empowering him would elect him speaker pro tempore outright, removing the “acting as” designation and allowing him to assume some of the powers of a permanent speaker, albeit for a short period of time. This would allow the House to resume normal business and begin taking up bills again. Jordan backs a plan to extend McHenry’s authority until Jan. 3, and other proposals have different timeframes.

    Whether such a plan could attract the support of a majority in the House remains to be seen. Many Republicans emerging from a conference meeting Thursday said they oppose such an arrangement, meaning it would require some level of support from Democrats, who are sure to demand concessions in exchange for their votes.

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  • House speaker vote live updates: Jim Jordan fails on second House speaker’s ballot

    House speaker vote live updates: Jim Jordan fails on second House speaker’s ballot

    Following Jordan’s failure to win the needed votes to become speaker, support is growing behind a proposal to empower Rep. Patrick McHenry, who has been serving as the temporary speaker.

    McHenry was appointed speaker pro tempore by former Speaker Kevin McCarthy under a rule that was adopted by the House after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. But given the unprecedented nature of McCarthy’s removal, the extent of McHenry’s authority has been unclear.

    Since assuming the role, the North Carolina Republican has limited his acts to gaveling the House in and out of session and overseeing the election of a new speaker, though he also ordered two top Democrats, former Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, to vacate offices in the Capitol.  

    But with the House remaining at a standstill, some Republican lawmakers — including two former speakers — believe the lower chamber should act to expand McHenry’s power.

    “By electing Representative McHenry as Speaker Pro Tempore of the House of Representatives, the House will be able to hold votes necessary to fund the government beyond the expiration of our current fiscal year,” Rep. Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania said in a statement Monday.

    Kelly introduced a resolution that would elect McHenry speaker pro tempore until Nov. 17 or until a new speaker is elected, whichever comes first. He said in a letter to colleagues that according to the House parliamentarian, McHenry is speaker pro tempore by designation only, which limits his powers. But by formally electing him, the House would give McHenry the authority to move legislation to the floor.

    Former Speakers Newt Gingrich and John Boehner also encouraged the House to expand McHenry’s powers.

    In response to a social media post from Boehner expressing support for empowering McHenry, Ohio Rep. Dave Joyce wrote, “funny you mention it…” Rep. Carlos Gimenez, a Florida Republican opposes Jordan and has said he will not be persuaded to back the conservative, also posted on social media to urge giving McHenry more authority.

    Any effort to empower McHenry would likely require support from House Democrats, and some have said they favor a vote to expand his authority to allow for consideration of a limited legislative agenda. Four Democratic members of the Problem Solvers Caucus signed on to a letter urging an immediate vote, and the proposal was endorsed by the Blue Dog Coalition, a group of centrist Democrats. 

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  • House Republicans try to find way forward after failed speaker vote

    House Republicans try to find way forward after failed speaker vote

    House Republicans try to find way forward after failed speaker vote – CBS News


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    House Republicans failed to pick a speaker Tuesday. Congressman Jim Jordan fell short of the votes he needed. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane has more.

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  • Jim Jordan falls short in first House speaker vote

    Jim Jordan falls short in first House speaker vote

    Jim Jordan falls short in first House speaker vote – CBS News


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    Rep. Jim Jordan failed to secure enough support in the first round of voting for a new House speaker. Another vote is scheduled for Wednesday as the government has only one month left of funding. Scott MacFarlane reports.

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  • House speaker vote live updates: Will GOP Rep. Jim Jordan be elected speaker?

    House speaker vote live updates: Will GOP Rep. Jim Jordan be elected speaker?

    Washington — The House of Representatives convened Tuesday to hold a formal vote to elect its new speaker, with Republicans putting forth Rep. Jim Jordan as their candidate to fill the post two weeks after the historic ouster of Rep. Kevin McCarthy roiled the conference.

    Jordan appeared to be on his way to 217 votes on Monday night, having won public endorsements of seven Republicans who had opposed him. Many of them said in statements that they had “productive conversations” with Jordan and would vote for him on the House floor. Asked if he thought he’d reach 217 votes in the first round of voting, Jordan told reporters, “I think so,” but if not, “we’ll keep voting.”

    The vote on the Republican and Democratic candidates for speaker — Jordan of Ohio and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York, respectively — will be a crucial test of support for Jordan, who was nominated by the GOP conference in a secret ballot vote Friday. Fifty-five Republicans opposed him in the party’s final ballot, and he spent the days leading up to the floor vote meeting with and calling holdouts to convince them to support his bid. By the end of the weekend, there were still 10 to 20 holdouts, CBS News’ Robert Costa reported. 

    With all Democrats expected to vote for Jeffries, it’s unclear whether Jordan, a conservative firebrand and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, can secure the 217 votes needed to claim the gavel. He still faces opposition from a number of moderate Republicans heading into the formal vote and can only afford four defections to take the helm of the House.

    The House is set to return at 12 p.m. ET, after which members will deliver opening statements, and Jordan and Jeffries will be nominated for speaker. 

    Alejandro Alvarez contributed to this report.

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  • Jim Jordan says he feels “really good” going into speaker’s race

    Jim Jordan says he feels “really good” going into speaker’s race

    Rep. Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, said Monday morning he felt “really good” going into Tuesday’s floor vote in the race to be the next speaker of the House, and by Monday evening, after the House GOP conference met, several Republicans echoed his optimism.

    Rep. Tom Emmer, Republican of Minnesota, told reporters, “We’re gonna have a speaker tomorrow,” and he said it would be Jordan. 

    Jordan said Monday night, “I felt good walking into the conference. I feel even better now. We got a few more people we want to talk to, listen to, and then we’ll have a vote tomorrow.”

    “When I left Friday, I told our colleagues, ‘Look, we’ll visit over the weekend. We’ll talk about any concerns and listen to concerns you may have,’” Jordan exclusively told CBS News Monday morning. “I think none of those concerns are anything that we can’t, we can’t address, so I feel good about where we’re at.”

    The Ohio Republican stayed in Washington over the weekend to meet with GOP lawmakers and make calls to shore up support. When the Republican conference went into recess Friday afternoon, Jordan had won the votes of 152 Republicans members by secret ballot, and 55 said they would not vote for him on the House floor. At the end of the weekend, there were still 10 to 20 holdouts, CBS News’ Robert Costa reported. 

    Monday morning, his candidacy received a boost from House Armed Services Chairman Mike Rogers, Republican of Alabama, who tweeted his endorsement on X. He said he had “two cordial, thoughtful, and productive conversations” with Jordan and said they agreed on the need to pass a strong defense bill, appropriations measures and the farm bill, which must be renewed every five years.

    Asked if Rogers’ backing could deliver more votes, Jordan called Rogers an “expert” and said he’s been picking up support since Friday. Jordan said he was “visiting” with more GOP members Monday. 

    Jordan also picked up the endorsement of Rep. Ann Wagner, of Missouri, who previously vowed to vote against him.  

    “Jim Jordan and I spoke at length again this morning, and he has allayed my concerns about keeping the government open with conservative funding, the need for strong border security, our need for consistent international support in times of war and unrest, as well as the need for stronger protections against the scourge of human trafficking and child exploitation,” Wagner said.

    By the end of the day Monday, Jordan had won new endorsements of seven Republicans. There is still some opposition to his bid, but several Republicans expressed confidence that Jordan would win the speakership Tuesday, possibly not on the first round, but soon afterward.

    Jordan sent a “dear colleagues” letter to convince any remaining holdouts that it would be far better to support him than to be forced to compromise with Democrats.

    “[T]he differences between us and our Democrat colleagues vastly outweigh our internal divisions,” he wrote.

    He also noted that “frustrations with the treatment of Kevin McCarthy and Steve Scalise and the events of the past month” have been raised. “You’ve been honest and open, and I appreciate the candid conversations,” Jordan said.

    He also promised that he would make sure that there are “more Republican voices involved in our major decisions beyond the Five Families.” This was a reference to the five groups in the GOP that hold the most power: The House Freedom Caucus, the Republican Study Committee, the Republican Main Street Caucus, the Republican Governance Group and the Problem Solvers Caucus, the Washington Post has noted. (And yes, the phrase “Five Families” alludes to the five mafia families in “The Godfather.”)

    Jordan needs 217 votes to secure the gavel. Asked if Jordan could reach that threshold, former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy told reporters “yes.”

    Jaala Brown, Jack Turman, Alejandro Alvarez and Ellis Kim contributed to this report.

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  • 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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  • House Speaker vote expected to be held Tuesday

    House Speaker vote expected to be held Tuesday

    The House is expected to vote Tuesday to possibly elect a new speaker, according to a notice posted by the Democratic whip. 

    The House has been without a speaker, who is second in line for the presidency, since Oct. 3, when Rep. Kevin McCarthy was ousted in a 216-210 vote, with eight Republicans joining all the Democrats in voting to remove him. It was the first time in history that a sitting speaker had been removed. 

    Rep. Patrick McHenry was immediately named speaker pro tempore, but the House has been left unable to conduct most business — including holding votes to support Israel or condemn Hamas after last week’s attack. 

    Since McCarthy’s ouster, Majority Leader Steve Scalise and Rep. Jim Jordan both threw their hats in the ring to be nominated by Republicans as the next speaker. Scalise won in a 113 to 99 vote among Republicans, but he removed his name from consideration only one day later, saying “there are still some people that have their own agendas.” 

    House Republicans on Friday then nominated the far-right Jordan, who members said had received 124 votes. But Rep. Austin Scott, a seven-term Georgia Republican, launched a last-minute protest candidacy before Friday’s meeting and won roughly 80 votes. 

    It’s unclear if Jordan has enough support from the full House. Any candidate needs a majority of the House to become speaker, which in this case is 217 votes, since there are two vacancies. Since Republicans have a slim majority in the House, they can only afford to lose four votes to get to a majority. 

    Democrats are advising their caucus to vote for Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, as they did during the 15 rounds of voting in January before McCarthy was formally elected. 

    Jeffries told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that “there have been informal discussions” between House Democrats and Republicans aiming to work toward creating a bipartisan governing coalition. Jeffries said he believes the conversations should formally start this coming week.

    “We have made clear publicly and privately that we are ready, willing and able to enter into a bipartisan governing coalition,” he said, adding, “we are ready to be reasonable in finding the common ground necessary.” 

    Rep. Mike Turner, meanwhile, told “Face the Nation” that he would be supporting Jordan for speaker and believed Jordan could get 217 votes on the floor. But, he conceded, if Republicans can’t rally behind Jordan or another candidate, then “obviously, there will be a deal” that will “have to be done.” 

    McCarthy was ousted after relying on Democrats to pass a continuing resolution to fund the government through Nov. 17, averting a government shutdown at the last minute. 

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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 10/9: CBS Evening News

    10/9: CBS Evening News

    10/9: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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  • McCarthy not ruling out another bid for speaker

    McCarthy not ruling out another bid for speaker

    Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is not ruling out another bid for the job from which he was ousted just last week, telling reporters Monday, “I’ll let the conference see who unites them.”

    His remarks came during a news conference Monday about the atttacks on Israel by Hamas that began over the weekend and have so far resulted in over 1,300 deaths and thousands of injuries

    McCarthy was asked multiple times whether he’d seek the speakership again. He did not rule out the idea, but repeated that it would be up to the GOP conference. But he also suggested that Republicans would have to take action to prevent the the next speaker from being ousted by such a small percentage of the conference. Eight of the 221 Republicans currently in the House joined all 212 Democrats to remove McCarthy.

    “Is our conference just gonna select somebody,” he said, “only to try to throw them out in another 35 days if eight people don’t get 100% of what they want and the other 96% does?”

    The question, he said, is “whether you want to be a conservative who will govern.” 

    Currently, it just takes one member to bring a motion to vacate the chair, which enabled Rep. Matt Gaetz to introduce the resolution last week. Under McCarthy’s predecessor as speaker, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a motion to vacate could be offered on the House floor only if a majority of either party agreed to it. 

    “The idea you’d allow eight people to do that with no consequences — no one’s gonna be successful.” McCarthy said. He also told reporters, “If this conference, regardless of who’s gonna be speaker, if it allows a few individuals that love a camera more than they love the American public, we are not gonna govern.”

    After he was removed as speaker, McCarthy initially said he would not run again. But more rank-and-file Republicans have been publicly calling for him to be restored to the office, beginning with Rep. Tom McClintock, of California, last week.

    Arguing that no other candidate is likely to win more than 96% of the vote of the GOP conference, McClintock said in a statement, “The only workable outcome is to restore Kevin McCarthy as Speaker under party rules that respect and enforce the right of the majority party to elect him.” He called on several of the eight lawmakers who voted McCarthy out “to disenthrall themselves from their decision and to repair the damage before it is too late.”

    On Monday, Rep. Carlos Gimenez, of Florida told CBS News he’d support Kevin McCarthy as speaker: “If he’s willing to fight, I’m willing to fight with him.” 

    Rep. Marc Molinaro, of New York said, “I’ve made no secret of supporting Kevin McCarthy. He earned my trust, and I’d welcome his return.”

    Rep. Brandon Williams, of New York, included McCarthy in the group of members running for speaker as a candidate whom he’d support if he can win the votes. “I want a Republican that can get 218 votes on the House floor. Steve (Scalise), Jim (Jordan), or Kevin (McCarthy) are all excellent candidates and I would support any one of them who can get to 218,” he told CBS News. “The world is dramatically different today than it was just one week ago.”

    Rep. Mike Lawler, of New York, also thinks McCarthy should be reinstated. Asked whether he expects someone to nominate McCarthy again, he responded, “We’ll see.” 

    After the attacks on Israel began, Rep. John Duarte, Republican of California told Politico, “A short window is all we need in the House to reinstate Kevin McCarthy and change the rule.” 

    McCarthy has also blamed Democratic House members for not giving him enough support to overcome the eight members of his own party who voted to remove him. But the former House speaker was extremely critical of President Biden, whom he accused of weakening the U.S. and embracing a policy of appeasement that emboldened and strengthened Iran, which has provided broad support for Hamas. He called on the U.S. government to rescue American hostages, resupply Israel, increase pressure on Iran with more sanctions and focus on the U.S.’ own intelligence failures. He also claimed Democrats were not doing enough to confront anti-Semitism in their own ranks.

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  • House ousts Kevin McCarthy as speaker, a first in U.S. history

    House ousts Kevin McCarthy as speaker, a first in U.S. history

    WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives on Tuesday ousted Republican Kevin McCarthy as speaker, the first time in history that the chamber has dethroned its leader in a no-confidence vote.

    McCarthy, of California, was voted out as speaker when a small band of eight hardline conservative Republicans joined all Democrats to approve a “motion to vacate” introduced by GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz, of Florida, a longtime foe of McCarthy’s.

    Moments after the vote ended, Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, a close McCarthy ally and Financial Services Committee chairman, assumed the role of speaker pro tempore and gaveled the chamber into recess.

    House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from California, speaks to members of the media at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Oct. 3, 2023.

    Nathan Howard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    McCarthy told colleagues Tuesday evening that he will not be running for speaker again, NBC News reported. In his first remarks since losing the speakership, McCarthy said he “wouldn’t change a thing,” and that he feels “fortunate” to have served as speaker.

    McCarthy’s ouster was effectively set in quick motion on Saturday when he pulled off a surprising legislative victory, getting Democrats to join Republicans in approving a short-term funding bill that avoided a government shutdown.

    While McCarthy pleased the White House with that move, it fueled already simmering resentments over his leadership among far-right members of the GOP caucus.

    Several of McCarthy’s supporters have said they plan to offer his name for the next round of speaker votes.

    But other members of GOP leadership have also been floated as potential replacements, including Majority Whip Tom Emmer of Minnesota and Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana. Both of them are popular among rank-and-file Republicans.

    The last time a motion to vacate vote occurred on the House floor was in 1910, when then-Republican Speaker Joseph Cannon survived it.

    McCarthy’s hold on the speakership had been tenuous since he was elected in January, due to a small clique led by Gaetz who are unhappy with the Californian.

    One source told NBC News on Tuesday that some McCarthy allies were “begging” a number of Democratic House members to vote with them to save his speakership.

    “We need Kevin McCarthy to remain as our speaker,” Emmer said during the debate. “We’re going to stay focused on our mission of delivering common sense wins for the American people.”

    Gaetz said, “The one thing that the White House, Democrats and many of us on the conservative side of the Republican caucus have in common is McCarthy said something to all of us at one point that he didn’t really mean and never intended to live up to.”

    “There’s nothing selfish about wanting a speaker of the House who tells the truth,” he said.

    Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., departs from the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., Sept. 29, 2023.

    Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Gaetz said that McCarthy no longer represents the interests of the GOP caucus after the speaker worked with Democrats to pass a stopgap funding bill to avoid a government shutdown over the weekend.

    House Speaker McCarthy: Matt Gaetz has 'personal things in his life that he has challenges with'

    House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., in a statement earlier Tuesday said the party’s members “will vote yes” on Gaetz’s motion to oust McCarthy, a pledge they fulfilled.

    “It is now the responsibility of the GOP members to end the House Republican Civil War,” Jeffries said.

    Gaetz had been threatening McCarthy with a motion to vacate since he worked with Democrats on a debt ceiling deal in the spring.

    McCarthy told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Tuesday morning that Gaetz has “personal things in his life that he has challenges with.”

    In January, as a condition to secure enough votes to become speaker, McCarthy agreed to change the rules to lower the threshold needed to bring a motion to oust a speaker from five votes to just one.

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  • Who voted to oust McCarthy as speaker? See the final tally of the House roll call

    Who voted to oust McCarthy as speaker? See the final tally of the House roll call

    Kevin McCarthy ousted as House speaker


    Kevin McCarthy ousted as House speaker

    03:44

    Eight House Republicans and 208 House Democrats voted Tuesday to oust House Speaker Kevin McCarthy — the first time in U.S. history a House speaker has been removed in a no-confidence vote. 

    The final vote of 216-210 came one day after far-right Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida accused McCarthy of making a “secret side deal” with President Biden on Ukraine aid to get a short-term funding bill passed hours before the government was set to shut down. 

    Here’s what the roll call looked like for House Resolution 757, the measure “declaring the office of Speaker of the House of Representatives to be vacant.”

    Which House Republicans voted against McCarthy?

    Though McCarthy had the support of most House Republicans, there were enough opponents within his party to cost him the speakership.

    “The reason Kevin McCarthy went down today is because nobody trusts Kevin McCarthy,” Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida told reporters after the vote. 

    Eight Republican members, including Gaetz, voted to oust McCarthy. They were:

    • Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona
    • Rep. Ken Buck of Colorado
    • Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee
    • Rep. Eli Crane of Arizona
    • Rep. Bob Good of Virginia
    • Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina
    • Rep. Matt Rosendale of Montana

    Did any Democrats vote to keep McCarthy as speaker of the House?

    All 208 Democrats in attendance voted against McCarthy. Not a single Democrat voted in favor of keeping him as House speaker.

    Before the vote, the House Democratic leadership urged their caucus to vote “yes” on the motion to vacate. 

    “Given their unwillingness to break from MAGA extremism in an authentic and comprehensive manner, House Democratic leadership will vote yes on the pending Republican Motion to Vacate the Chair,” Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York wrote to his caucus. 

    Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington said her party would be unanimous in voting against McCarthy.

    “We are following our leader, and we are not saving Kevin McCarthy,” she said. 

    Who wasn’t present for the vote?

    Three Republicans and four Democrats were not present for the vote. Among them was Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the former speaker, who is in San Franciso to attend Sen. Dianne Feinstein‘s public funeral service. The House members who didn’t vote were:

    • Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri (D)
    • Rep. John R. Carter of Texas (R)
    • Rep. Lance Gooden of Texas (R)
    • Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida (R)
    • Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California (D)
    • Rep. Mary Sattler Peltola of Alaska (D)
    • Rep. Emilia Strong Sykes of Ohio (D)

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  • Kevin McCarthy’s Brief Speakership Meets Its End

    Kevin McCarthy’s Brief Speakership Meets Its End

    Kevin McCarthy began his 269th day as House speaker by recounting all the times he proved his doubters wrong. In January, after a series of humiliating defeats, the California Republican hung on to become speaker of the House. In the months since, he reminisced, he has narrowly averted the twin crises of a national-debt default and, this past weekend, a government shutdown. “I just don’t give up,” McCarthy told reporters after making one more plea to his party to keep him in his post.

    Today, McCarthy’s streak of defying his skeptics came to an end as a group of his GOP critics joined Democrats to vote him out of the speakership after fewer than nine months in office. The unprecedented move could paralyze the House for days or even weeks, as Congress faces a November 17 deadline for funding the federal government.

    Whether McCarthy is done for good as speaker remains unclear. The vote to remove him will trigger a new election, and McCarthy was coy with reporters earlier in the day about whether he’d try to reclaim the gavel. Assuming he doesn’t, his tenure atop the House—the briefest in nearly 150 years—was as historic as it was short-lived: He won the office after fighting through more ballots than any speaker in a century, and he was the first to be removed in the middle of a term by a vote of the House.

    Few of McCarthy’s 54 predecessors had assumed the speakership with lower expectations. His years rising through the GOP leadership had left him with a reputation as a glad-handing lightweight with few convictions. And his majority seemed ungovernable from the start. He had just a five-vote margin over the Democrats, and was surrounded by hard-liners who demanded confrontation over compromise. McCarthy traded away much of his power as speaker during the marathon series of votes that ended, after 15 rounds, with his election. As part of the horse trade, McCarthy handed his Republican foes the means of his own destruction: the ability for a single member to call, at any time, a vote on whether to remove the speaker.

    “From day one, he knew and everyone knew that he was living on borrowed time,” Representative Gerry Connolly of Virginia told me recently.

    McCarthy’s most ardent Republican critic, Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida, had made the speaker’s ouster his singular mission even before McCarthy made a surprise reversal on Saturday to avert a government shutdown. Gaetz ultimately persuaded seven Republicans to join him in voting to remove McCarthy via a procedural maneuver known as a motion to vacate the chair.

    Democrats faced their own conundrum: Was the speaker they knew a safer bet than a replacement they didn’t? Whichever Republican succeeds McCarthy is likely to be just as conservative and just as beholden to the hard-line faction that deposed him—if not more so. Yet Democrats ultimately decided that McCarthy was not worth rescuing; all 208 in attendance today voted to remove him.

    The speaker had lurched to the right far more often than he governed from the center; he had joined the bulk of the GOP in forgiving former President Donald Trump for his role in fomenting the Capitol insurrection on January 6, 2021, and just a month ago buckled to conservative demands to launch an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. “It is now the responsibility of the Republican members to end the House Republican Civil War,” the House minority leader, Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, declared after a lengthy Democratic Party conference this morning, urging members to support McCarthy’s removal as speaker.

    In the end, McCarthy almost survived only because Democrats struggled to get their members to the Capitol in time for the crucial votes. McCarthy, however, had suffered too many Republican defections for it to matter. The process began with a vote on a motion to table Gaetz’s motion to vacate the chair. Eleven Republicans voted with the entire Democratic caucus to clear the way for McCarthy’s ouster, more than twice as many members as the speaker could afford to lose within his own party. “The office of speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby declared vacant,” Representative Steve Womack of Arkansas, presiding over the vote, said after the 216–210 roll call concluded.

    No obvious successor has emerged. McCarthy’s top lieutenant, Majority Leader Steve Scalise, is popular with conservatives but is now undergoing treatment for blood cancer. Majority Whip Tom Emmer or GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik could also emerge as alternatives, but neither has been openly campaigning for the job.

    Ever the optimist in public, McCarthy seemed to sense before the votes that the run of good fortune and political survival that had taken him to the nation’s third-highest office would not last much longer. He had struck a defiant tone, defending to the end his decision to keep the government open even if it cost him his job. “If you throw out a speaker” for averting a government shutdown, he warned reporters and, implicitly, his Republican colleagues, “then I think we’re in a really bad place.”

    Russell Berman

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