The Pak Banker

Trump ally, Kevin, fails for 2nd day to secure post of House speaker

- WASHINGTON

Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives failed for a second straight day to elect a leader on Wednesday, as a faction of holdouts repeatedly defied former President Donald Trump’s call to unite behind his ally Kevin McCarthy.

After three failed votes and a round of closed-door talks, McCarthy appeared no closer to securing the post of House speaker, a powerful job second in the line of succession to the presidency. Lawmakers voted to go home for the evening and try again at 12 p.m. (1700 GMT) on Thursday.

The stalemate raised questions about Republican­s’ ability to govern over the coming two years as they stumbled over what is usually a routine vote at the outset of a legislativ­e session. House members must first name a leader before swearing in individual members and taking up legislativ­e business.

McCarthy, from California, has served as the top House Republican since 2019 and led his party’s successful effort to win control of the chamber in the 2022 midterm elections.

But he has now fallen short in six straight votes over two days, as a group of 20 hardline conservati­ves who have deemed him ideologica­lly unreliable have refused to back him, leaving him short of the 218 votes needed to win the job.

McCarthy’s supporters grew increasing­ly frustrated as the day wore on.

“You have 20 people demanding that 201 surrender to them unconditio­nally. Well, I will not surrender unconditio­nally,” Republican Representa­tive Trent Kelly said at a news conference. The leadership fight has provided a dismaying start for the new Republican majority in the House after the party managed to secure a slim 222-212 majority in November’s elections.

The internal struggle underscore­s the challenges the party could face over the next two years, heading into the 2024 presidenti­al election. The last time the House failed to elect a speaker on the first ballot was in 1923, during a contest that took nine ballots to resolve.

McCarthy said he was making progress. “I don’t think voting tonight does any difference, but I think voting in the future will,” he told reporters after meeting with opponents.

His supporters had hoped that repeated votes would wear down opponents. But as the day progressed with no sign of headway, Republican faith in McCarthy’s success appeared to be flagging.

“At some point, there will be a speaker, and it will be a Republican,” Representa­tive Tom Cole predicted.

Other names floated as possibilit­ies included No. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise and Representa­tive Jim Jordan – who received 20 votes when nominated on Tuesday. Both said they backed McCarthy. The possibilit­y of the House electing a Republican speaker with Democratic help appeared to gain traction.

Progressiv­e Democrat Ro Khanna said he could support a moderate Republican who would agree to share subpoena power with Democrats and to avoid brinkmansh­ip over government funding and the debt ceiling. He cited House Republican­s Brian Fitzpatric­k, Mike Gallagher and Dave Joyce as possibilit­ies.

“I’m open to it,” Khanna told Reuters, adding that other Democrats could also be on board. “There’d be a significan­t number if it’s the right Republican with the right commitment­s.”

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