Houston Chronicle

Trusted McCarthy lieutenant McHenry is interim speaker

- By Laura Davison

Kevin McCarthy’s temporary replacemen­t as U.S. House leader is one of the ousted speaker’s most trusted lieutenant­s, Patrick McHenry.

McHenry, 47, the congenial chairman of the House Financial Services Committee who is known for his penchant for bow ties and policy acumen, will preside over deliberati­ons on a new speaker.

The North Carolina Republican’s first act upon taking the dais Tuesday after McCarthy’s removal was to advise members of each political party to meet to deliberate on choices for speaker. The interim speaker then loudly banged a ceremonial gavel to place the House in recess.

McHenry, who has denied interest in the House speaker post, has been an influentia­l McCarthy adviser and negotiator.

He was first on a secret list of backup speakers McCarthy submitted when he became the House leader, a requiremen­t imposed after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack raised questions about succession in an emergency.

McHenry played a crucial role in brokering the debt-ceiling deal averting a U.S. default earlier this year. He helped launch McCarthy into the speakershi­p and was a key intermedia­ry in persuading hard-line Republican­s to drop their opposition to McCarthy, which dragged the January election out to 15 rounds of voting.

He’s well liked among House Republican­s. Rep. Tom Cole, who defended McCarthy on the House floor Tuesday, has said McHenry is “absolutely indispensa­ble” and “a guy that everybody in every corner of the conference trusts.” He’s also earned praise from Republican hardliners for listening to their concerns.

McHenry’s role on the Financial Services panel has given him a deep understand­ing of financial markets and he’s known to show willingnes­s to work with Democrats on the committee. He decided against a formal role in McCarthy’s leadership team, choosing instead to lead the finance panel to focus on banking and cryptocurr­ency policy.

McHenry first came to Congress in 2005 as a 29-year-old who was at the time the youngest lawmaker.

He arrived with an aggressive style, looking to change how Washington operated. He is now at the inner circle of power and faces a new generation of young upstarts who want to take power from the Republican establishm­ent.

 ?? ?? Drew Angerer/Tribune News Service Rep. Patrick McHenry says he’s not interested in the post.
Drew Angerer/Tribune News Service Rep. Patrick McHenry says he’s not interested in the post.

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