Daily Press

Key NC Republican­s back plan to select speaker

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Top Republican leaders in the North Carolina House have consolidat­ed their support behind four-term Rep. Destin Hall to become speaker once Tim Moore’s time at the post is complete.

There’s been a shadow campaign this year within the House Republican Caucus to build support to become the next speaker, as Moore has said his record fifth two-year term leading the chamber would be his last. The next scheduled election for speaker is January 2025.

Hall, the House Rules Committee chair from Caldwell County, and Majority Leader John Bell, of Wayne County, have been the leading candidates.

The two men, along with two other key House GOP leaders, told a caucus meeting this week they backed a plan whereby Hall would become the caucus nominee to be the next speaker. If ultimately backed by the caucus and elected by a majority in the 120-seat chamber, Hall would select Bell as the next rules chair, the lawmakers said.

Hall said Thursday that he and Bell — friends who sit next to each other on the House floor — spoke in the past few weeks “about what makes sense for us and for our caucus as a whole.”

Hall and Bell said in separate interviews that contrastin­g work and family obligation­s contribute­d to the proposed arrangemen­t. Being speaker requires a lot of time in Raleigh for administra­tive duties and travel elsewhere to raise campaign funds.

The Republican infighting on Capitol Hill this month over the choice of a new U.S. House speaker also served as an impetus to avoid hostilitie­s that could split the caucus, Hall said.

“We were confident that we could avoid the kind of problems that they’ve had in D.C.,” Hall said about the arrangemen­t, first reported by Axios.

Hall, Bell and Rep. Jason Saine, of Lincoln County, the senior chair of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, all said they believe Hall had the support of a strong majority of House Republican­s to become speaker.

The plan “was very well received by the caucus,” Bell said.

Rep. Keith Kidwell, of Beaufort County, also announced this summer he would run for speaker. Kidwell, the leader of the House Freedom Caucus, was absent this week in Raleigh as lawmakers wrapped up this year’s work session. He didn’t immediatel­y respond to questions sent to his office asking about his candidacy.

Moore has said he expected to serve out the remainder of his House term through 2024 and would be speaker during the budget-adjusting work session that begins in April. He said this week he was considerin­g a run for a U.S. House seat next year.

The legislatur­e, which has been controlled by Republican­s since 2011, approved a new set of General Assembly districts for use starting in 2024 that appear to put GOP lawmakers in good shape to retain their House and Senate majorities.

Hall, 36, is a Granite Falls lawyer first elected to the House in 2016. By 2020, he was the rules committee’s co-chair, and a few months later he was the sole chair, managing the flow of legislatio­n in the chamber.

 ?? CHRIS SEWARD/AP ?? Granite Falls attorney
Destin Hall, a four-term representa­tive in the North Carolina House, has support to become the chamber’s next speaker.
CHRIS SEWARD/AP Granite Falls attorney Destin Hall, a four-term representa­tive in the North Carolina House, has support to become the chamber’s next speaker.

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