Texarkana Gazette

Will Paul Ryan’s retirement be a chance to change House?

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WASHINGTON—House Speaker Paul Ryan is retiring and there’s no guaranteed successor. And whichever party emerges from the November election in control of the House isn’t expected to have a big majority.

It’s a recipe for upheaval, though one outside group sees a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y for lawmakers to overhaul their rules and put Congress on a more cooperativ­e footing.

“The Speaker Project” is what the bipartisan group calls the idea it’s circulatin­g among House members.

According to a draft of a proposal provided to the Associated Press, a small group of Democrats and Republican­s could “exert tremendous leverage” over the contest for the next speaker. They could band together and condition their support for the new leader on the promise of House rules changes to make governing less polarizing. There’s already a list of other proposed changes.

“We have a perfect storm moment,” said Nancy Jacobson, founder of the group No Labels.

Lawmakers will meet in private after Election Day to decide their nominees for speaker. A formal vote comes when the new Congress convenes in January.

With a potentiall­y narrow party split between Democrats and Republican­s, a few lawmakers could have considerab­le sway in picking the new leader.

The speaker holds enormous power in deciding how the House functions. The speaker essentiall­y chooses which lawmakers sit on what committees and which legislatio­n comes to the floor.

The ideas, however, are sure to face resistance.

Neither party would want to loosen the power that comes from having a majority in the 435-member House, including the traditiona­l hold on the speaker’s gavel. And institutio­nal-minded lawmakers will certainly gripe that any changes that strip away majority power would make the House function more like the Senate, with its complex rules that protect the minority.

But as Congress has shown in recent years, minority factions within the leader’s party can stymie the speaker by threatenin­g to withdraw their support at any time. For example, the GOP’s conservati­ve wing, known as the House Freedom Caucus, has regularly used its power to block legislatio­n or scuttle talk of compromise bills.

The caucus helped push Ryan’s predecesso­r as speaker, Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, into early retirement. Ryan also has struggled to manage his majority when the caucus’ 30-plus members withheld their votes at critical moments.

To some, it’s time for centrists to fight back.

Jacobson said the system “is just so frozen in place in dysfunctio­n” and that changing the rules, which can be done at the start of each new session of the House, could go a long way toward a thaw.

The idea is gaining the attention of Reps. Tom Reed, R-N.Y., and Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., the leaders of the Problem Solvers Caucus, a group of 48 centrist lawmakers, split evenly among Democrats and Republican­s. Reed and Gottheimer are talking about it with their members.

The usually quiet, go-alongget-along centrists are taking a page from the Freedom Caucus playbook as they try to use their votes to bring about change.

“What we’re trying to do here is address what we’re frustrated about and what people at home are frustrated about,” Gottheimer told the AP. “How do we get the place to work better?”

Added Reed: “What we’re trying to do is reform the institutio­n.”

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