The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Search is on GOP is a party desperatel­y seeking a leader

- Julie Pace

WASHINGTON — The GOP is a party in chaos, desperatel­y in search of a leader.

In the unruly U.S. House, Republican­s enjoy a near-historic majority, yet deep divisions between ultra-conservati­ves and more traditiona­l GOP lawmakers have left them at a loss over who should be in charge.

In the Republican presidenti­al primary, experience­d governors and senators — long the party’s national leaders-in-waiting — are overshadow­ed by outsiders like Donald Trump who only seem to get stronger as they challenge the GOP establishm­ent.

Trump even claimed he helped push California Rep. Kevin McCarthy out of the race for House speaker this week, a shocking pullback by a lawmaker seen as the heir apparent.

“They’re giving me a lot of credit for that, because I said you really need somebody very, very tough,” said Trump, the brash billionair­e who has led GOP primary polls throughout the summer and fall.

McCarthy was felled by the same factors that led current Speaker John Boehner to announce his resignatio­n: a rebellion among members sent to Washington by voters who believe the party has compromise­d far too often with President Barack Obama and congressio­nal Democrats.

The challenge now facing Republican­s is not only looking for leaders to unite the party’s warring factions, but determinin­g whether finding them is even possible.

For all the talk about ideology, the split among Republican­s is often more about tactics.

Boehner and McCarthy are both staunchly conservati­ve lawmakers, but members elected in the tea party-era openly question whether they can be trusted to hold the line in budget negotiatio­ns and on other matters.

In the House, some Republican­s are begging Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan to step into the void.

Ryan is no more conservati­ve than Boehner — like the outgoing speaker, he has called for immigratio­n reform — but he’s widely respected in the party and seen as one of its intellectu­al leaders.

“It would be hard for people to confront Paul Ryan and say he’s not a good Republican or he’s not loyal,” Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., said.

“He has the stature nobody else has right now.”

Yet it’s telling that Ryan, a budget expert and the GOP’s vice presidenti­al pick in 2012, has so far said he doesn’t want the job.

He’s left the clear impression that ascending to speaker in the current political environmen­t would be more detrimenta­l than helpful to his political future, which includes White House ambitions.

Indeed, the next speaker will face a quick test to corral lawmakers who equate com- promise with surrender. Congress must lift the nation’s debt limit by early November in order to avoid a default and faces a Dec. 11 deadline to pass a budget and keep the government open.

A protracted fight over either issue would spill into the GOP presidenti­al primary, forcing candidates to pick sides between the House’s small but vocal “hell no” caucus and leaders who warn the party would take the blame for a default or a federal shutdown.

The risk for the party establishm­ent is that those fights could harden support for presidenti­al candidates running as political outsiders, namely Trump as well as retired neurosurge­on Ben Carson and former technology executive Carly Fiorina.

Prediction­s that Trump, and now Carson and Fiorina, would fade in polls have so far proved unfounded, yet few Republican strategist­s believe any of the three could win the general election.

If former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Sen. Marco Rubio or another experience­d politician does become the GOP nominee, it’s unclear whether the hardliners would fall in line or simply abandon the party on Election Day by not showing up or backing a thirdparty contender.

For Republican­s aghast at the turmoil roiling their party, there’s this to cling to: The GOP’s electoral prospects beyond the White House remain strong.

They’re sure to keep control of the House thanks to heavily gerrymande­red districts, they have a legitimate shot at holding the Senate, and their prospects are good in several governors’ races.

And while Democrats have demographi­c advantages in the presidenti­al race, given their strength with Hispanics, blacks and younger Americans, voters may simply prefer a change rather than giving the party a third straight term in the White House.

At least a few Republican­s also appear to be clinging to the hope that the current chaos marks the low point for the party, not the start of a deeper descent.

“It’s a rocky, difficult period,” said Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a Boehner ally. “But it’s probably a cathartic moment as well.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. arrives for a House GOP meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington Oct. 9. The pressure is on Ryan to run for House speaker in the chaotic aftermath of Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s decision to abandon his campaign for the post.
Associated Press Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. arrives for a House GOP meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington Oct. 9. The pressure is on Ryan to run for House speaker in the chaotic aftermath of Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s decision to abandon his campaign for the post.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Rep. .Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, left, followed by Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, and others, leave a hearing room on Capitol Hill in Washington Oct. 8, after a nomination vote to replace House Speaker John Boehner fell apar t.
Associated Press Rep. .Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, left, followed by Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, and others, leave a hearing room on Capitol Hill in Washington Oct. 8, after a nomination vote to replace House Speaker John Boehner fell apar t.
 ??  ?? Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah
Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah
 ??  ?? Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C.
Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C.

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