Los Angeles Times

A reluctant Ryan now considerin­g speaker post

Republican­s beg the Wisconsini­te to take Boehner’s post, but a tough turn as speaker could foil his goals.

- By Lisa Mascaro lisa.mascaro@latimes.com Noah Bierman in the Washington bureau contribute­d to this report.

Republican House members’ hard sell to recruit 2012 vice presidenti­al nominee spills into open pleadings that he run.

WASHINGTON — After repeatedly insisting that he had no interest in becoming speaker of the House, Republican Rep. Paul D. Ryan is now seriously considerin­g the job.

He had little choice. The wonkish Wisconsin congressma­n and former vice presidenti­al nominee is seen as the party’s best hope to calm the chaos in the GOP-controlled House after Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) abruptly pulled out of the race to replace retiring Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) amid a conservati­ve backlash.

As House Republican­s met privately Friday in the Capitol basement to assess the fallout, the hard sell to recruit Ryan spilled into open pleadings that he run. Some even suggested he should simply be made speaker without a vote — by acclamatio­n.

“Paul’s looking at it, but it’s his decision,” McCarthy said after the session. “If he decides to do it, he’d be an amazing speaker.” But McCarthy, who was considered next in line for the post, also offered a caution: “It’s a big job.”

It’s not hard to understand Ryan’s hesitation.

Taking over the gavel could be a political loser for Ryan, who would inherit the same dysfunctio­n fueled by a rebellious conservati­ve minority that helped prod Boehner to announce his retirement two weeks ago and then scuttled McCarthy’s bid to replace him.

Beyond the protestati­ons against spending time away from his family, which includes three small children, Ryan’s reluctance is rooted in a realistic calculatio­n of the political damage the speaker’s job could do to his promising career.

Now in his ninth term in office, Ryan is often mentioned as presidenti­al material, even though he passed on the 2016 campaign to remain at his perch as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.

He is known as one of the GOP’s brightest thinkers and the economic guru who crafted the budget that would turn Medicare into a voucher system to deeply cut costs.

But Ryan’s conservati­ve credential­s have not been fully tested in the day-to-day wrangling required of a leader, and a bruising turn as speaker risks dimming his star power. Outside conservati­ve groups have already begun to attack.

“I know Paul’s getting a lot of pressure today,” said Rep. Dave Reichert (RWash.). “I don’t care who the speaker is — he’s going to have the same battles.”

Ryan did not address the closed-door session Friday, but Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), a committee chairman, said he thought Ryan would agree to run.

“We’re going to need a leader who can bring all these factions together instead of being at war with each other, and that’s very difficult to do,” McCaul said. “I think he’s leaning toward it. I know the speaker’s been putting a lot of pressure on him. I know various members of the conference and chairman — they want him to get in.”

Ryan’s 2012 running mate, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Mitt Romney, has also called the congressma­n to encourage him to take the post.

But demands or dissent from the conservati­ves will almost certainly push Ryan away from a run. In fact, the congressma­n is not expected to campaign for the job at all.

On Friday, he began his day like most others — waking up in the office where he sleeps while in Washington, then hitting the gym for a workout before settling in for eggs and sausage at the closed-door meeting.

Now that he has the chairmansh­ip he set his sights on almost since arriving in Congress 17 years ago, he is hesitant to give it up for a job he never wanted.

Some supporters predict he would only take the speaker’s gavel if he had the full support of the House GOP, and such unity is a tall order.

As lawmakers adjourned for a week’s recess, at least a dozen other Republican­s have emerged as possible candidates, but none have broad appeal among the severely divided majority.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah, who made a last-minute play to run as an alternativ­e to McCarthy, said Friday he would not run against Ryan. Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida, a member of the Freedom Caucus, is still running.

In the meantime, Boehner’s scheduled Oct. 30 departure could be delayed. He has vowed to stay on until a new leader is chosen, which he predicted would take place by the end of the month.

“Time for us to take the walls down, open up our ears and listen to each other,” Boehner told lawmakers Friday, according to a person in the room. “But while we go through this process, we’ve got to continue to address the people’s priorities. This institutio­n cannot grind to a halt.”

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