Baltimore Sun

McCarthy gets past initial hurdle for House speaker

Scott to challenge McConnell as GOP leader in the Senate

- By Lisa Mascaro and Farnoush Amiri

WASHINGTON — Republican leader Kevin McCarthy won the nomination Tuesday for House speaker, clearing a first step with majority support from his colleagues, but he now faces a weekslong slog to quell right-flank objections before a final vote in the new year.

McCarthy has led House Republican­s this far, and with the party now on the cusp of majority control, he has a chance to seize the gavel from fellow California­n Nancy Pelosi if Democrats are defeated.

The GOP leader won a 188-31 vote, with ballots cast by new and returning lawmakers, but the challenges ahead are clear.

McCarthy will need to grind out support from no fewer than 218 lawmakers from his slim ranks when the new Congress convenes in January, leaving just a few votes to spare.

“We’re going to have the ability to change America,” McCarthy said.

He noted backing from right-flank Republican­s Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio as part of his “vast support.”

But Republican leaders are facing an intense backlash on Capitol Hill over their disappoint­ing performanc­e in the midterm elections, when McCarthy’s promises of a GOP sweep that would transform Washington collapsed. Instead, the House could have one of the slimmest majorities in 90 years.

The fallout is spilling down-ballot into other Republican leadership races and into the Senate, where Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky will face a challenge from GOP Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, the party’s campaign chairman, in Wednesday’s elections. Scott announced his bid Tuesday.

The former chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, announced he was challengin­g McCarthy, saying Americans want a “new direction.”

It’s not just McCarthy whose leadership is in question but his entire team. This includes Rep. Tom Emmer, R-Minn., the campaign chairman who traditiona­lly would be rewarded with a leadership spot but finds himself in a three-way race for GOP whip that was forced into a second-round of voting.

The No. 2 Republican, Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, had an easier time, winning the majority leader spot unconteste­d, by voice vote. He pledged that House Republican­s, if they win the majority, will launch “oversight necessary to hold the Biden Administra­tion accountabl­e.”

And one of former President Donald Trump’s top allies in the House, Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York — the third-ranking House Republican and the first lawmaker to back Trump in a 2024 run — is working to fend off rival Rep. Byron Donalds, a Black Republican from Florida seen by many lawmakers as a potential new party leader.

A self-described “Trump-supporting, liberty-loving, pro-life, pro-Second Amendment Black man,” Donalds said after a closed-door forum late

Monday he has enough support for the race with Stefanik to be close.

Trump backs McCarthy for speaker, but the two have had a rocky relationsh­ip, and even Trump’s support is no guarantee McCarthy will reach the needed 218 votes when the new Congress convenes, particular­ly if Republican­s win the House with just a slim, few-seat majority that would leave him no cushion for detractors.

At least one Trump ally, Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, has said he’s voting no on

McCarthy.

It’s a familiar dynamic for House Republican­s, one that befell their most recent Republican speakers — John Boehner and Paul Ryan — who both retired early rather than try to lead a party splintered by its far-right flank.

McCarthy survived those earlier battles between party factions, but he was forced to back out of a bid for the speaker’s job in 2015 when it was clear he did not have support from conservati­ves.

The weeks ahead promise to be a grueling period

of hardball negotiatio­ns with the Freedom Caucus and rank-and-file Republican­s as McCarthy tries to appease them and rack up the support he will need in the new year.

The conservati­ve Freedom Caucus lawmakers, who typically align with Trump, are prepared to extract demanding concession­s from McCarthy before giving him their backing. They have a long list of asks — from prime positions on House committees to guarantees they can have a role in shaping legislatio­n.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Rep. Kevin McCarthy faces challenges to replace House Speaker Nancy Pelosi before a final vote in January. The GOP is on the cusp of majority control in the House.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Rep. Kevin McCarthy faces challenges to replace House Speaker Nancy Pelosi before a final vote in January. The GOP is on the cusp of majority control in the House.

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