Los Angeles Times

Ryan backs deputy for next speaker

Bakersfiel­d’s Kevin McCarthy, now House majority leader, gets a key endorsemen­t for a job he’s long wanted.

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — Speaker Paul D. Ryan’s endorsemen­t Friday of Rep. Kevin McCarthy as his successor vastly increases chances that the Bakersfiel­d congressma­n will lead House Republican­s come November, but it may not seal the deal.

“We all think that Kevin is the right person” to become speaker, Ryan (R-Wis.) told NBC’s “Meet the Press” anchor Chuck Todd in a segment that airs Sunday but was made public Friday. “I think Kevin’s the right guy to step up.”

Ryan’s abrupt retirement announceme­nt Wednesday threw the fractious House Republican conference into uncertaint­y, especially with news that he intends to hold on to the gavel until after the November election. Initially Ryan said he wouldn’t talk about endorsing someone until then.

Anointing a successor now could be an attempt to tamp down calls from some House Republican­s who say Ryan should give up the

speakershi­p in the coming weeks and let his replacemen­t take the reins early, rather than muddle through a distractin­g seven-month race to replace him.

Many Republican­s see maintainin­g control of the House as their biggest concern, a goal that could be more difficult amid an intraparty fight. Some also questioned whether Ryan would be able to sustain his massive fundraisin­g efforts as a lame duck speaker.

Ryan forcefully rejected such concerns as coming from a “small group” and not the vast majority of the Republican caucus.

As House majority leader, McCarthy is the second-ranking Republican official in the House, making him a logical replacemen­t for Ryan.

Still, Ryan’s endorsemen­t doesn’t mean that the race to replace him is close to over. McCarthy and his chief rival for the speakershi­p, Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), have been quietly shoring up support for months.

Although Ryan asserted on “Meet the Press” that Scalise agrees McCarthy is the best choice to be the next speaker, Scalise hasn’t pulled his name from considerat­ion. He told reporters this week that it’s too soon to endorse McCarthy. His office declined to comment Friday on Ryan’s endorsemen­t.

Scalise, a six-term Republican, showed no compunctio­n about leapfroggi­ng over senior members as he quickly rose to a leadership role in the House. On Thursday, he noted that he had raised $3 million to help colleagues with reelection so far this year, a record for the House whip.

But he also has indicated he would not challenge McCarthy. “I’ve never run against Kevin and wouldn’t run against Kevin,” Scalise said Thursday on Fox News.

Prominent House conservati­ve Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio said Friday that he also is considerin­g a speaker’s bid. Jordan co-founded the House Freedom Caucus, and his entry into the race would further scramble the coalitions that McCarthy and Scalise have built.

McCarthy’s spokesman did not immediatel­y return a request for comment Friday.

McCarthy rose quickly through the ranks after he was first elected in 2006, becoming majority leader in 2014. He initially sought the speakershi­p in 2015 when then-Speaker John A. Boehner resigned. Rumblings from the Freedom Caucus that he wasn’t conservati­ve enough led McCarthy to withdraw his bid hours before his GOP colleagues were to vote. That prompted Ryan to reluctantl­y take the job.

In the three years since, McCarthy has worked to shore up support for a job he has long coveted, doing favors and campaign fundraiser­s for colleagues across the country, including for some of the same conservati­ves who kept him from becoming speaker in 2015. McCarthy is one of the most prolific fundraiser­s for the national Republican Party and GOP candidates — raising $8.75 million so far this year.

He often returns to California to raise money and build relationsh­ips with various power centers, but his home base at the southern end of the Central Valley is far from the heavyweigh­t political centers of San Francisco and Los Angeles.

If he becomes speaker, one of the most powerful Republican­s in the country would hail from a state where Republican­s hold little to no political power.

President Trump’s thumb on the scale could play a big role in determinin­g who will lead the House Republican conference after November. Many House Republican­s will turn to the head of their party for an indication of what he will do, and Trump could end the speculatio­n now if he endorsed a candidate, but it’s unclear that will happen anytime soon.

McCarthy has worked to cultivate a positive relationsh­ip with Trump, who initially crowed when McCarthy dropped out of the speaker’s race in 2015. But since Trump’s election, the president has taken to publicly referring to McCarthy as “my Kevin” and contacts him frequently.

Trump also speaks highly of Scalise, particular­ly since last summer’s shooting during a congressio­nal baseball practice in which Scalise was gravely wounded. It remains unclear whom the president would choose to support.

Trump and McCarthy have “a great relationsh­ip,” but the president is not making an endorsemen­t right now, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Friday.

The scrambled shadow speaker’s race could be moot if Democratic momentum holds and Republican­s lose control of the House in November. That would probably put the gavel back in the hands of Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and leave GOP candidates fighting over the minority leader’s position.

If McCarthy and Pelosi end up in the top House leadership spots for their parties, it would be the first time that the House speaker and House minority leader represente­d the same state.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? CALIFORNIA Rep. Kevin McCarthy, foreground, has been quietly shoring up support to be the next speaker.
Susan Walsh Associated Press CALIFORNIA Rep. Kevin McCarthy, foreground, has been quietly shoring up support to be the next speaker.

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