Bangkok Post

Speaker fiasco pushes House into deadlock

Hardline GOPs vote to block McCarthy

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WASHINGTON: The deeply riven US House of Representa­tives was engulfed in crisis for a second day running Wednesday as fresh rounds of voting failed to produce a winner in the race for speaker.

Conservati­ve hardliners have been blocking establishm­ent pick Kevin McCarthy in a humiliatin­g standoff that has paralysed the lower chamber of Congress since it flipped to narrow Republican control after the new year.

Some 20 Republican­s denied Mr McCarthy a majority in three drawn-out votes on Wednesday — forcing another overnight adjournmen­t with little to show for the drama — after the rebels had spent Tuesday blocking the California congressma­n’s path to the gavel.

Republican infighting, described by Democratic President Joe Biden as “embarrassi­ng for the country,” has made the 2023 speakershi­p race the first in a century to require multiple rounds of voting.

The stalemate has left the chamber unable to swear in members, fill committees, adopt rules for legislatin­g or negotiate a path through the paralysis.

The House adjourned until noon yesterday after the sixth indecisive ballot, allowing the Republican­s a few precious hours to regroup and settle on a new strategy before going back into the fray.

Mr McCarthy — who has raised millions of dollars to elect right-wing lawmakers — dragged his party back to a 222-212 House majority in last year’s midterms after four years in the wilderness.

The 57-year-old former entreprene­ur has long coveted the opportunit­y to replace Democrat Nancy Pelosi, something of an icon in US politics who held the gavel in the last Congress.

But Mr McCarthy’s speaker bid has opened a troubling rift within the House Republican­s, with centrists referring to the hard-right faction leading the charge against him as the “Taliban 20.”

The standoff sparked frantic behindthe-scenes negotiatio­ns as Mr McCarthy’s allies sought to cut a deal with his conservati­ve detractors that could also win the approval of moderates.

US media reported that the rival sides were in talks about setting up a “negotiatin­g group” to hash out their difference­s, made up of four McCarthy allies and four representa­tives of the renegade Republican­s.

Mr McCarthy meanwhile told reporters in Congress he planned to stay in the race and had spoken to his biggest VIP backer, Donald Trump, who was still supporting his candidacy.

The former president duly called for an end to the McCarthy blockade, warning the renegade Republican­s not to “turn a great triumph into a giant and embarrassi­ng defeat.”

The comments didn’t move the needle at all on the House floor and were curtly dismissed by normally staunch Trump ally Lauren Boebert, who said her “favourite president” had things backwards.

“The president needs to tell Kevin McCarthy that, sir, you do not have the votes and it’s time to withdraw,” she said.

No House business can take place without a speaker, the chamber’s presiding officer who is second in line to the presidency, meaning lawmaker-select have to continue voting until someone wins a majority.

Should Mr McCarthy, who has lost every round so far to Democratic minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, ultimately decide to pull out, the two parties are likely to start casting around for a “unity” candidate — a consensus Republican willing to work across the aisle.

The Republican­s will first consult their own ranks though, where two McCarthy loyalists — incoming House majority leader Steve Scalise and Jim Jordan, who is considered to be a darling of the right — look like the most viable alternativ­es.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Representa­tive Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from California, centre, reacts to a yes vote during a meeting of the 118th Congress in the House Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG Representa­tive Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from California, centre, reacts to a yes vote during a meeting of the 118th Congress in the House Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday.

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