San Francisco Chronicle

Ryan backs McCarthy to be successor as House leader

- By Lisa Mascaro and Bill Barrow Lisa Mascaro and Bill Barrow are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Paul Ryan has endorsed his top lieutenant, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, to be his successor, giving a significan­t boost to the California­n’s candidacy in hopes of averting a divisive contest that could make an already difficult election year even tougher for divided Republican­s.

“We all think that Kevin is the right person,” Ryan, R-Wis., said in an interview that will air Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Ryan said that while he believes McCarthy can line up enough votes now to win the job, he doesn’t want a campaign for the party’s top job to sidetrack GOP lawmakers at a crucial time. Ryan has said he will serve as speaker through the year, though some in the party want him to leave earlier.

“All these other things would be needless distractio­ns from the task at hand” of pushing GOP legislatio­n and “fighting for our majority,” Ryan said.

McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, the House majority leader, is viewed as contending for Ryan’s job with No. 3 House GOP leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

Republican­s are facing a difficult election season in which President Trump’s unpopulari­ty and a wave of Democratic enthusiasm are expected to cost the GOP many House seats. Should the party lose its majority, the top Republican would be minority leader, not speaker.

The White House declined to weigh in Friday on whom the president preferred for speaker.

“The president has a great relationsh­ip with Kevin McCarthy, but in terms of an announceme­nt about who he wants to see as the next speaker, I don’t have any announceme­nts on that front,” said press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

Scalise has said he wouldn’t run against McCarthy, a longtime friend. But Scalise hasn’t ruled out seeking the job if McCarthy fails to nail down the 218 votes that will be needed to elect a speaker when the new Congress convenes in January. McCarthy failed to win enough support when he tried replacing John Boehner as House speaker in 2015, and many wonder if continued skepticism by conservati­ves may again deny him the post.

In a signal of continued conservati­ve disgruntle­ment, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said Friday he’s “open to running” for the top job. Jordan is a leader of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus. His candidacy seems certain to fall short and is viewed as a bid to make conservati­ves the kingmakers in the race.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press 2015 ?? Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, hopes to secure leadership of the party without having to mount a divisive fight for it.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press 2015 Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, hopes to secure leadership of the party without having to mount a divisive fight for it.

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