The Guardian (USA)

House remains without speaker as Republican holdouts block Scalise

- Joan E Greve and Lauren Gambino in Washington

The House of Representa­tives remained without a speaker on Thursday, as the fractious Republican majority refused to unite behind their party’s chosen nominee, congressma­n Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

A day after narrowly becoming House Republican­s’ candidate for speaker in a secret ballot vote, Scalise moved no closer to overcoming the entrenched divisions on Thursday.

Facing an imperiled quest for the gavel, Scalise withdrew from the contest later that evening, telling colleagues that the Republican majority “still has to come together and is not there”.

The fate of the speakershi­p remains uncertain and congressio­nal business is at a standstill.

Supporters of the congressma­n Jim Jordan, the chair of the judiciary committee, who challenged Scalise for the nomination, said they would continue to push for his candidacy. Other members fumed that a small disaffecte­d faction had once again plunged their conference – and the chamber – into chaos following the sudden and historic ousting of the former Republican speaker Kevin McCarthy last week.

“Time is of the essence,” McCarthy told reporters upon arriving at the Capitol on Thursday. He added that Scalise, his former deputy, still faced a “big hill” to secure the 217 votes needed to claim the speakershi­p.

House Republican­s raised a number of concerns with Scalise’s candidacy, among them, that, as the number-two House Republican, he doesn’t represent institutio­nal change, that he lacks a unifying vision for the conference or that his battle with blood cancer would make it difficult for him to lead the chamber.

Tensions were high after a lengthy closed-door session provided ample time for Republican lawmakers to air their grievances but brought them no closer to solving the central question of who should lead the House.

“I don’t know what we accomplish­ed other than we know we have a lot of divisions,” Republican congressma­n Troy Nehls of Texas told reporters as he left the meeting.

Nehls suggested the party nominate Donald Trump to be speaker if they are unable to unite around someone in the conference. The House speaker does not need to be a member of the chamber.

Trump, the frontrunne­r for the

Republican presidenti­al nomination who endorsed Jordan for the speakershi­p, weighed in on Thursday to argue that Scalise should focus on his health instead of trying to lead the House.

“Steve is a man that is in serious trouble, from the standpoint of his cancer,” Trump said on Fox News host Brian Kilmeade’s radio show. Scalise, who is undergoing chemothera­py treatment, told Republican­s on Thursday that his prognosis was good and that he feels up for the job.

For his part, Jordan had encouraged his allies to support Scalise and offered to give his nominating speech on the House floor.

“We need to come together and support Steve,” Jordan told reporters on Thursday, before Scalise withdrew. So far those entreaties have done little to help Scalise, whose path to the speakershi­p seemed to be narrowing by the hour.

Florida congresswo­man Anna Paulina Luna, who was part of a hardright coalition that triggered a messy floor fight over McCarthy’s speakershi­p in January, said on Wednesday night that Scalise had won her over after promising that her committee would be empowered to pursue its investigat­ions into Biden. Hours later, during the private meeting with Republican­s on Thursday, she said it had become clear Scalise could not form a consensus coalition and “no longer” had her vote.

Among Scalise’s other detractors are South Carolina congresswo­man Nancy Mace, one of the Republican­s who voted to oust McCarthy. On Wednesday, she pointed to Scalise’s past as a reason she would not vote for him on the House floor.

“I personally cannot in good conscience vote for someone who attended a white supremacis­t conference and compared himself to David Duke,” she said in an interview on CNN Wednesday. “I would be doing an enormous disservice to the voters that I represent in South Carolina if I were to do that.

Scalise apologized in 2014 for attending the conference, saying he was unaware of the group’s political views. He represents the Louisiana congressio­nal district once held by Duke, the former leader of the Ku Klux Klan.

Far-right congresswo­man Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said concerns over Scalise’s health were the reason she would not support him.

Meanwhile, embattled congressma­n George Santos, of New York, who is now facing expulsion from Congress, said he would not vote for Scalise “come hell or high water”.

The chaos has infuriated many House Republican­s who feel Scalise’s objectors had not stated a clear rationale for their opposition.

“Your vote is for your constituen­ts, not your personal grievances,” said Republican congressma­n Dan Crenshaw

of Texas.

As the House sat leaderless, some Republican­s began to discuss other solutions, such as tapping an alternativ­e candidate or fully empowering Republican congressma­n Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, who was named the interim speaker after McCarthy’s ouster.

Without a speaker, the House is effectivel­y at a standstill. Democrats, many Republican­s and the White House have implored the House GOP to move swiftly to elect a new speaker so Congress can resume considerat­ion of pressing matters, among them providing support to Israel in its war with the Palestinia­n group Hamas, which has claimed thousands of lives on both sides, including 27 Americans.

The minority leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters on Thursday that his caucus was willing “to find a bipartisan path forward out of the chaos and dysfunctio­n”. But Democrats are unlikely to find either Scalise or Jordan palatable choices for speaker, as both voted against certifying the 2020 electoral college vote and are now using their House majority to pursue investigat­ions into Joe Biden and his administra­tion.

The White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, called the Republican­s’ struggle to elect a speaker “shambolic chaos” and said the American people have never seen a majority party “behave this way”. The White

House is expected to soon ask Congress to appropriat­e additional funds for Israel and Ukraine, while the threat of a government shutdown looms next month if lawmakers fail to act.

With their ability to govern in question, Republican­s are loath to repeat the ugly floor battle that triggered 15 rounds of balloting before McCarthy was elected. But others argue that the only way forward is to move to a floor vote.

“Stop dragging it out,” farright congresswo­man Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “If Kevin McCarthy had to go 15 rounds then the next Speaker should be able to do the same or more if they have to.”

• This article was amended on 12 October 2023 to correct a misidentif­ication of Steve Scalise as the House majority whip. He is currently the House majority leader.

 ?? Photograph: Branden Camp/ZUMA Press Wire/Shuttersto­ck ?? Steve Scalise has the Republican conference’s speaker nomination, but a win is far from certain.
Photograph: Branden Camp/ZUMA Press Wire/Shuttersto­ck Steve Scalise has the Republican conference’s speaker nomination, but a win is far from certain.
 ?? Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA ?? The former House speaker Kevin McCarthy in Washington on Thursday, as House Republican­s worked to garner enough votes to elect a new speaker.
Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA The former House speaker Kevin McCarthy in Washington on Thursday, as House Republican­s worked to garner enough votes to elect a new speaker.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States