The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Leadership battle may roil GOP after election

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Win or lose in the race for the majority, House Republican­s are at risk of plunging into a messy leadership battle after the November election, with the party lacking a clear heir apparent to take the place of House Speaker Paul Ryan.

President Donald Trump has signaled he’d be happy with next-in-line Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader, a longtime ally whom the president calls “My Kevin.”

But Trump is also saying kind words about the No. 3 Republican, GOP Whip Steve Scalise, whom he calls the “legend from Louisiana.” Scalise survived life-threatenin­g injuries after he was shot at a congressio­nal baseball practice in 2017.

And there’s a third lawmaker in the mix: conservati­ve Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, who is waging a longshot bid to take the gavel. Trump appeared with Jordan at an Ohio rally in the summer and beamed when the crowd started chanting, “Speaker of the House!”

“There’s going to be a contest, for sure,” said GOP Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a veteran of leadership battles who said he’s never seen anything like the “high drama” that’s about to unfold. “Usually the election settles all the issues. This one won’t.”

Polls are seesawing in the final weeks before the election, creating suspense about whether Democrats will regain control of the House for the first time since 2010. Yet it’s almost certain that the often unruly House GOP contingent will be smaller next year. Republican­s hope to hold the majority, but fully expect to lose some seats.

Conservati­ves say the House majority is at risk in large part because Republican­s didn’t stand fully behind Trump. They fault their own side for failing to repeal “Obamacare,” build a wall along the border with Mexico and keep other campaign promises. If there’s a GOP wipeout on Election Day, Republican­s will probably be eager to boot the current GOP leadership, which could help Scalise or Jordan.

In public, none of the leaders-in-waiting likes to talk about the struggle to come. Their goal, they say, is to keep the House majority. But behind the scenes all three are all dialing up colleagues and racing around the country spending their time — and campaign cash — to salvage the GOP’s hold on the House.

“It’s going to be close, but I still think we keep the majority,” McCarthy said on Wednesday.

McCarthy, who is traveling to a dozen states for two dozen lawmakers in October and shoveled $24 million in donations to candidates and campaign committees, convened an allhands-on-deck conference call, urging colleagues to put campaign money into a team effort to protect the majority.

The upbeat mood after that call Wednesday was a turnaround from the gloom of a few weeks ago when polls indicated Democrats were favored to take over the House, with even safe seats in Trump-won districts in Pennsylvan­ia and Iowa at risk. Republican­s are sensing an uptick, thanks to Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on to the Supreme Court, and a newly energized electorate awakened to the stakes of the midterm. As McCarthy puts it, “This is an election about jobs versus the mobs.”

Scalise technicall­y isn’t even running for a promotion — officially, he backs McCarthy for speaker — but he’s indicated he would be available to step in if McCarthy falls short.

While boarding a plane after campaignin­g in Michigan, Scalise said that while the GOP ranks may be smaller and tighter after the election, the outcome “brings everybody closer.” He was dashing off to support the GOP candidate in an open seat in South Carolina. Rather than embolden challenges to the leadership, the election could knit the House GOP closer together behind Trump’s agenda, he said.

“Everybody needs to be all in,” Scalise said. “We’re not fighting to keep this majority to be at odds with each other. We want to get some things done.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan (center) is retiring, putting House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (left) and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise in position to contend for his post if Republican­s hold the majority.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP House Speaker Paul Ryan (center) is retiring, putting House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (left) and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise in position to contend for his post if Republican­s hold the majority.

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