Dayton Daily News

Boehner is speaker again

WestaChest­eraTwp.acongressm­ana getsa11amo­reavotesat­hananecess­ary.

- ByJessicaW­ehrman Washington Bureau

House Speaker John Boehner took the gavel for a third term as speaker of the U.S. House of Representa­tives Tuesday despite a last-ditch effort by tea party conservati­ves to unseat the West Chester Twp. Republican.

In all, 24members of his caucus voted for other Republican­s for speaker, while a 25th, Rep. Brian Babin, R-Texas, voted “present.”

Despite the drama, Boehner received 216 out of 408votes cast — 11 more votes than he needed to win the election on the first ballot. Had he fallen short, a second ballot would have been required in a chamber that now has the largest

GOP House majority since the Truman administra­tion.

The vote Tuesday made clear, however, that Boehner’s caucus includes a sizable number of members who are not happy with him. The defections more than doubled from two years ago, when 12 Republican­s either voted for another candidate or voted “present.”

Ohio Republican­s unanimousl­y backed Boehner for speaker, though one member — Rep. Jim Jordan, a tea party favorite from Urbana — received two votes for speaker. Rep. Daniel Webster, R-Fla, came in second among Republican­s, receiving 12 votes. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., received 164votes, including support from all four Ohio congressio­nal Democrats. Boehner needed a majority of votes cast, or 205 votes, to avoid a second ballot.

Minutes after the vote, Boehner, 65, flanked by Republican and Democratic members of the Ohio House delegation, entered the floor to applause and cheers.

“Let’s make this a time of harvest,” he said, urging the House to do good work and “disagree without being disagreeab­le.”

Boehner’s path to a third term as speaker initially looked clear, with no Republican­s stepping up to oppose him when the GOP caucus met to decide on House leadership in November.

But a handful of House conservati­ves were outraged in December over what they perceived as a missed opportunit­y. Boehner at that time chose not to use a $1.1 trillion spending bill as leverage against President Barack Obama’s executive order that would allow some 5 million undocument­ed immigrants to escape risk of deportatio­n.

Last weekend, two conservati­ve Republican­s — Rep. Ted Yoho, R-Fla., and Louie Gohmert, R-Texas — announced they would run against Boehner for speaker. Gohmert received three votes and Yoho received two. Among others receiving votes from House Republican­s: Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Sen. Jeff Sessions, RAla., who do not serve in the House. That the conservati­ves could not unite behind one candidate indicates that even within that small group, there are also divisions, and no real consensus on an alternativ­e to Boehner.

But Democrats, too, did not universall­y vote for Pelosi: Four Democrats voted against her, including one Democrat who voted for retired fourstar Gen. Colin Powell as speaker.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Speaker John Boehner, R-West Chester Twp., holds up the gavel after being reelected to a third term during the opening session of the 114th Congress, as Republican­s assume full control for the first time in eight years Tuesday on Capitol Hill in...
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS /ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker John Boehner, R-West Chester Twp., holds up the gavel after being reelected to a third term during the opening session of the 114th Congress, as Republican­s assume full control for the first time in eight years Tuesday on Capitol Hill in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States