Chattanooga Times Free Press

Speaker Ryan pushes back on pressure for his early exit

- BY LINDSEY MCPHERSON CQ- ROLL CALL ( TNS)

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Paul D. Ryan defended himself Tuesday amid reports of threats to his leadership position and reiterated his view that it’s not in Republican­s’ best interest to have a divisive leadership race before the November midterm elections.

“Obviously I serve at the pleasure of the members; those are the people who drafted me in this job in the first place,” the Wisconsin Republican said when asked if he is confident he will remain speaker through the election. “But I think we all agree the best thing for us is to complete our agenda and not wedge into the completion of our agenda divisive leadership elections.”

One report from Politico said top Republican­s were questionin­g Ryan’s effectiven­ess as speaker and arguing that he’s lost some juice now that he’s a lame duck. Other news articles have raised similar questions, although, when asked publicly, most members say they disagree that Ryan is any less effective now and believe he should stay in his role.

“The members drafted me into this job because of who I am and what I stand for,” Ryan said.

In the wake of the defeat of the farm bill on the floor Friday, the speaker outlined Republican­s’ coming floor schedule. Just this week, the chamber will consider the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, a banking overhaul bill, a measure to provide expanded access to experiment­al medical treatments and legislatio­n to overhaul the prison system and reduce recidivism rates.

Having a leadership election at this time would distract from Republican­s’ agenda, Ryan argued.

Another report from The Weekly Standard suggested Ryan’s No. 2 and preferred pick to succeed him after the elections, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, has been in talks with top Republican­s including President Donald Trump about pushing Ryan out early.

“I read that report; that report is not true,” McCarthy said standing alongside Ryan during the GOP leadership’s weekly news conference.

“I think you’re building something in that’s not out there,” the California­n added.

When that story broke Monday, McCarthy vehemently denied it and any assertion he was trying to force Ryan to vacate his post.

Both Ryan and McCarthy dismissed the assertion that Friday’s farm bill failure calls the speaker’s leadership capabiliti­es into question.

Reiteratin­g what has become the party line, McCarthy said that measure was universall­y opposed by Democrats and thus Republican­s had to pass it on their own, which they failed to do. Ryan asserted that sometimes farm bills hit a lot of speed bumps before eventually passing. “Obviously last Friday was regretful,” Ryan said. “Obviously we did not want to see members take down the farm bill.”

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Paul Ryan

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