The Boston Globe

McCarthy willing to return as speaker

Reverses stance following ouster

- By Maegan Vazquez and Marianna Sotomayor

Representa­tive Kevin McCarthy of California said Monday that he is willing to resume serving as House speaker if enough of the Republican­s who voted in favor of his ouster last week are open to his reinstatem­ent.

“Whatever the conference wants, I will do,” McCarthy said during an interview on Hugh Hewitt’s syndicated radio program when asked about a possible return to the job. He echoed that sentiment hours later at a news conference largely focused on the Israel-Hamas war.

McCarthy made the comments as the House Republican conference prepared to meet for the first time since Tuesday, when eight Republican­s joined all Democrats present in voting for McCarthy’s removal. At that point, McCarthy said he would not run for a leadership role again, saying last week: “I will not run for speaker again. I’ll have the conference pick somebody else.”

Now less than a week since McCarthy’s ouster, Congress faces a new challenge: how to respond to the violence that has erupted between Hamas and Israel over the weekend without a speaker in place. Though he’s no longer speaker, McCarthy on Monday attempted to fill the leadership void, prescribin­g a way forward to support Israel, which many of his allies saw as a signal that he is open to being renominate­d as speaker.

But many of the eight Republican­s were upset with McCarthy for relying on Democratic votes to avert a government shutdown, tipping the scale to remove him from office. McCarthy on Monday defended his actions, suggesting that the state of the country would have been worse off had he not passed a budget relying on Democratic votes. Without winning back their support, it remains unclear how McCarthy could get the 217 votes to successful­ly regain the gavel.

“I’m a conservati­ve [who] believes in governing in a conservati­ve way,” he said during the news conference. “I can only think if the government was shut down right now, what would we be talking about? What would our men and women even be questionin­g? What would the border look like? Would people around the world, would Iran take advantage of that?”

Two other Republican­s, majority leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana and Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordan of Ohio, have launched bids to succeed McCarthy.

At Monday’s news conference, McCarthy pointed out that he maintained the support of “96 percent” of the members of the House Republican conference, saying the remaining 4 percent is “playing politics.”

McCarthy’s projected openness to returning to leadership comes amid genuine concerns in the GOP conference that neither Scalise or Jordan can garner the necessary 217 majority votes in the full House to become speaker.

Moderate Republican­s, some of whom represent swing districts that President Biden won in 2020, remain skeptical that a Speaker Scalise or Jordan would represent their interests, given that both are extremely conservati­ve. While both candidates are trying to assuage their concerns, moderates are now openly calling for reinstatin­g McCarthy as speaker.

House Republican­s plan to gather Monday night in a closed meeting to discuss where the conference goes next after McCarthy’s ouster as speaker. A candidate forum is scheduled Tuesday, followed by voting among House Republican­s on Wednesday.

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