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McCarthy flips GOP holdouts as campaign for House speaker gathers speed

- By Jennifer Shutt

WASHINGTON — Kevin McCarthy’s campaign to become speaker of the U.S. House will stretch into at least Friday night, as the California Republican inched ahead in his struggle to unite his divided party around his candidacy and an overhaul of rules under which the chamber will operate.

“We’ll come back tonight, and I believe at that time we’ll have the votes to finish this once and for all,” McCarthy told reporters Friday afternoon after the chamber voted 220-212 to adjourn until 10 p.m., Eastern.

Fifteen GOP holdouts moved to McCarthy’s side during two more rounds of voting, though that wasn’t enough for him to reach the threshold needed to become speaker. Republican­s allied with McCarthy called for the House to adjourn until two absent House Republican­s, who support McCarthy, are expected to be back in the Capitol.

McCarthy in negotiatio­ns has promised changes in the rules of the House to win over his conservati­ve foes. But no GOP leaders, nor the Republican­s who switched to backing McCarthy on Friday, have released documents or a clear outline of the changes, making their details or how they’d be enforced somewhat murky. The House would vote on the proposed rules changes after a speaker is elected.

Republican House leaders are reportedly planning to allow any member of the chamber to bring up a so-called motion to vacate, down from a previously planned five-member threshold, for a maneuver that essentiall­y allows a no-confidence vote on the speaker.

In addition, conservati­ves won concession­s about having representa­tion on key committees and getting leaders to reduce spending to the fiscal 2022 level.

Any negotiatio­ns that touched on defense spending were of deep concern to defense hawks who represent districts with big Pentagon spending. Moving from the current fiscal 2023 level of about $1.7 trillion back to the roughly $1.5 trillion discretion­ary spending level of fiscal 2022 would represent significan­t reductions to nondefense accounts, since Republican­s appear unlikely to cut defense spending.

The group also got an agreement to bring annual government funding bills to the floor under an open rule process, which allows any member of the House to offer amendments.

That practice hasn’t been employed in years. Leaders in both parties have allowed the Rules Committee to filter amendments going to the floor for debate and votes, eliminatin­g the risk of “gotcha” amendments or repetitive amendments that essentiall­y make the same change.

McCarthy said after the vote to adjourn that the ongoing disagreeme­nt over whether he should become speaker is actually good for the House GOP Conference, despite it being the longest speaker election since before the Civil War.

“This is the great part. Because it took this long, now we learned how to govern. So now we’ll be able to get the job done,” he said.

SWITCHING TO McCARTHY

Dan Bishop of North Carolina, Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma, Michael Cloud of Texas, Andrew Clyde of Georgia, Byron Donalds of Florida, Paul Gosar of Arizona, Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, Mary Miller of Illinois, Ralph Norman of South Carolina, Andy Ogles of Tennessee, Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia, Chip Roy of Texas, Keith Self of Texas and Victoria Spartz of Indiana all moved to backing McCarthy on the 12th ballot on Friday.

Spartz previously had been voting present in an effort to get the holdouts in a room to work out a deal.

Maryland’s Andy Harris then flipped his vote to McCarthy on the 13th ballot.

“If the agreement we were able to finalize over the last few days is implemente­d, it will be the greatest change in how the House operates and becomes much more responsive to the American people in at least two generation­s,” Harris said in a written statement following his changed vote.

The remaining holdouts opposing McCarthy by late Friday afternoon were Andy Biggs of Arizona, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Eli Crane of Arizona, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Bob Good of Virginia and Matt Rosendale of Montana.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Perry said that the recent McCarthy supporters were working on getting the remaining holdouts to his side.

“If there’s something that we can address that would alleviate their concerns, that will ameliorate their concerns, we’re wanting desperatel­y to deal with that immediatel­y, so that we can get past this,” Perry said.

Perry and the House Freedom Caucus members who shifted their support to McCarthy said the deal under negotiatio­n will hold the speaker accountabl­e, curb spending and allow for more conservati­ve representa­tion on committees.

“It is critically important that the Rules Committee reflects the body and reflects the will of the people and that is a part of this framework,” Perry said.

CHALLENGIN­G OUTLOOK FOR HOUSE

The drawn-out speaker process highlights how challengin­g it will be for McCarthy, or whoever becomes speaker, to move legislatio­n across the House floor with a four-person majority.

While many of the bills the House Republican Conference plans to move will be partisan and unlikely to get floor votes in the Democratic Senate, Congress has several must-pass bills that House GOP leaders will need to negotiate with Senate Democratic leadership and the Biden administra­tion.

Those bills have been central to the ongoing dispute within the House GOP about how the party will handle its 222-person majority during this Congress.

The more conservati­ve members of the party want to use the dozen annual government funding bills, which are supposed to become law by the start of the fiscal year on Oct. 1, to leverage GOP policy goals.

 ?? Screen Shot via C-SPAN ?? Tylease Alli, the Reading Clerk of the United House of Representa­tives, is pictured during the sixth vote for the Speaker of the House on Jan. 4.
Screen Shot via C-SPAN Tylease Alli, the Reading Clerk of the United House of Representa­tives, is pictured during the sixth vote for the Speaker of the House on Jan. 4.

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