The Guardian (USA)

Ousted House speaker McCarthy says Johnson shouldn’t fear losing job: ‘I don’t think they could do it again’

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

The embattled speaker of the US House, Mike Johnson, should not be “fearful” of the motion to remove him filed by the far-right extremist Marjorie Taylor Greene, said Kevin McCarthy – who last year became the first speaker ejected by his own party when another extremist, Matt Gaetz, moved against him in the same way.

“Speaker Johnson is doing the very best job he can,” McCarthy told CBS on Sunday, two days after Greene filed her motion. “It’s a difficult situation, but the one [piece of] advice I would give to the conference and to the speaker is: do not be fearful of a motion to vacate. I do not think they could do it again.”

“They” – the Trumpist far-right of a far-right party – did it to McCarthy in October. Gaetz, from Florida, filed a motion to vacate the speakershi­p – a move made possible by concession­s won when the right put McCarthy through 15 votes to secure the speaker’s gavel nine months before.

McCarthy, from California, told CBS Gaetz had been “trying to stop an ethics complaint”.

“It was purely Matt coming to me trying [to get] me to do something illegal to stop the ethics committee from moving forward in an investigat­ion that was started long before I became a speaker.”

Gaetz was investigat­ed by the House ethics committee over allegation­s of sexual misconduct also subject to investigat­ion by the US Department of Justice. The congressma­n denies wrongdoing.

Gaetz’s motion to eject McCarthy was supported by seven other Republican­s and succeeded when Democrats declined to vote to keep the speaker in place.

Johnson succeeded McCarthy after three Republican leadership figures – Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan and Tom Emmer – failed to gain sufficient support, in a more-than-three-week

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