Austin American-Statesman

GOP leadership crisis continues

House Republican­s return to Washington this week with no clear candidate for speaker and crucial budget deadlines looming.

- By Erica Werner

House Republican­s return to Washington this week to confront a nearly unpreceden­ted leadership crisis, looming budget deadlines and a deeply uncertain future.

Attention is focused on Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the GOP’s 2012 vice presidenti­al nominee, who is under pressure from party leaders to run for House speaker — a job he repeatedly has made clear he does not want.

Even if Ryan yields to his colleagues’ pleas, conservati­ves are increasing­ly serving notice that the 45-year-old House Ways and Means Committee chairman will have to audition for the job just like anyone else, despite his widespread support.

That suggests that the same hard-liners who pushed current Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, to announce his resignatio­n and scared off his heir apparent, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., could throw up obstacles to Ryan, too.

It also leaves any resolution unclear for a party that seems nearly irreparabl­y divided. More than a half-dozen lawmakers are considerin­g running for speaker if Ryan does not, even as hard-liners warn that Boehner risks more rebellions if he stays on past his planned departure date of Oct. 29.

“John is a lame duck. There was a reason John announced his resignatio­n,” said Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina, a leader of the House Freedom Caucus. “I think Paul does have the credibilit­y across the conference to be able to unite us, but to say he’s the only one I think is hyperbole.”

“It’s not just the conservati­ves Paul would have to convince,” Mulvaney added. “Everybody’s interested in a new type of leadership.”

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