The Guardian (USA)

Election lies to Fox News fixture: key things to know about Jim Jordan

- Sam Levine, Joan E Greve and Lauren Gambino

As the House gears up to vote for its new speaker, all eyes are on Jim Jordan, a founder of the hard-right Freedom caucus. But while the Ohio congressma­n and his allies say they will have the votes soon, Jordan also has a long history of controvers­ial views that many of his own party members and constituen­ts are not aligned with.

Here are some of the key things to know about Jordan as a politician – and a look into how he might act in the role of speaker.

Jordan was closely involved in Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the election

Jordan was a “significan­t player” in Trump’s efforts to overturn the election, according to the House committee that investigat­ed the January 6 attack on the US Capitol. As early as November of 2020, he was part of discussion­s with Trump campaign and White House officials examining whether Mike Pence could overturn the election. Immediatel­y after the election, he met with Trump campaign and White House officials at the campaign’s headquarte­rs to help develop a strategy of repeatedly, and falsely, saying the election was fraudulent, the New York Times reported.

On 2 January 2021, Jordan led a conference call with members of Congress and the White House in which they discussed urging Trump supporters to march to the Capitol. The day before the January 6 attack, Jordan texted the then White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, to pass on advice that Pence should “call out all the electoral votes that he believes are unconstitu­tional as no electoral votes at all”.

After the violence at the Capitol, Jordan was one of several members of Congress to whom the White House reached out to try to delay counting of electoral votes. He received five calls from Rudy Giuliani, one of Trump’s closest allies, that night, according to the January 6 committee. The two men spoke at least twice that night. Jordan later said he spoke with Trump on January 6, but could not recall how many times.

Given his staunch efforts to spread misinforma­tion, it wasn’t much of a surprise that Jordan was one of 147 House Republican­s who voted to overturn the election. He also signed on to an unsuccessf­ul lawsuit Texas filed at the supreme court seeking to get electoral college votes thrown out in key battlegrou­nd states.

Jordan helped seed the lie that the election was stolen

Jordan has been one of the most prolific spreaders of misinforma­tion about the election. Weeks before election day, Jordan accused Democrats of “trying to steal” the election. After election day, he continued to claim that something was amiss in Pennsylvan­ia, one of the key states that swung the election for Biden and repeatedly and falsely tied mail-in voting to fraud. He quickly called for congressio­nal investigat­ions into claims of fraud and supported outlandish investigat­ions by Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani into voting equipment.

Jordan blocked efforts to find out more about his involvemen­t in the plan to overturn the election

The January 6 committee subpoenaed Jordan and four other congressme­n after the group refused to voluntaril­y cooperate with the panel. Jordan refused to comply with that subpoena, calling it “an unpreceden­ted and inappropri­ate demand to examine the basis for a colleague’s decision on a particular matter pending before the House of Representa­tives”. The committee referred Jordan to the ethics committee for investigat­ion.

Jordan was accused of engaging in a cover-up of widespread sexual abuse at Ohio State University

Between 1987 and 1995, Jordan served as an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State University. During that time, he worked alongside Richard Strauss, a team doctor who was accused of sexual abuse. A 2019 independen­t report commission­ed by OSU concluded that Strauss “sexually abused at least 177 male student-patients he was charged with treating as a university physician”.

Jordan has repeatedly denied any knowledge of Strauss’s actions, but former wrestlers have attested that Jordan was directly informed of the doctor’s misconduct. Earlier this month, four former OSU wrestlers publicly denounced Jordan, saying his inaction rendered him unqualifie­d to become speaker of the House.

“Do you really want a guy in that job who chose not to stand up for his guys?” the former OSU wrestler Mike Schyck told NBC News. “Is that the kind of character trait you want for a House speaker?”

Jordan is known for disrupting the House – but not getting much done

John Boehner, the former Republican House speaker, repeatedly criticized Jordan for pressuring Republican leadership to advance his hard-right agenda. Speaking to Politico Magazine in 2017, Boehner described Jordan as a “legislativ­e terrorist”.

Jordan was part of a coalition of archconser­vative lawmakers that antagonize­d Bohener, repeatedly threatenin­g to remove him from the speakershi­p. Though they never followed through, the constant pressure and threats ultimately drove Boehner to early retirement.

“I just never saw a guy who spent more time tearing things apart – never building anything, never putting anything together,” Boehner told CBS News in 2021.

According to Vanderbilt University’s Center for Effective Lawmaking, Jordan consistent­ly ranks among Congress’s least effective lawmakers. In the last Congress, Jordan ranked 217th out of 222 House Republican­s.

Jordan was behind many recent shutdowns

Since arriving in Congress 16 years ago, Jordan has played a central role in several of the most consequent­ial government shutdowns. In an attempt to undermine Barack Obama’s healthcare law, Jordan led the charge to shut down the government in 2013. It lasted 16 days and nearly drove the US to the brink of default.

Two years later, in 2015, he and his conservati­ve allies in Congress used similar tactics, threatenin­g a shutdown in an effort to defund Planned Parenthood, though an agreement was reached and a closure was averted in time.

Again in 2018, Jordan was one of

 ?? Michael Conroy/AP ?? Donald Trump and Jim Jordan at a rally in Vandalia, Ohio, in November 2022. Photograph:
Michael Conroy/AP Donald Trump and Jim Jordan at a rally in Vandalia, Ohio, in November 2022. Photograph:
 ?? ?? Jim Jordan at the US Capitol on 16 October. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP
Jim Jordan at the US Capitol on 16 October. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP

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