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The failed full-court press to install Republican Rep. Jim Jordan as House Speaker revealed ugly examples of how violent threats are becoming normalized inside Trump’s GOP. According to Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas, the strategy behind the threats is to “Attack, attack, attack. In the run-up to that attack, members of the Proud Boys even bragged that they could dress up as Antifa. In the next breath, however, he says that the war in Israel creates moral urgency to push through a Jim Jordan speakership. Any sense that this was a random unhinged person without a partisan political agenda was demolished by his demand that the congressman vote for “Jim Jordan or more conservative.” This caller has explicit right-wing ideological demands.
Persons: John Avlon, , Jim Jordan, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Jordan, Ken Buck, Colorado, he’d, Steve Womack, “ It’s, , Jake Tapper’s, ” It’s, bender, That’s, Jim Jordan speakership, doesn’t, , Trump, Trump’s, Liz Cheney, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Jake Sherman, Rep, Warren Davidson, Donald Trump’s, Utah Sen, Mitt Romney, Jordan couldn’t Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, , NBC, Republicans, Capitol, Trump, Rep, Punchbowl News, Ohio, Republican Party, Utah Locations: “ Lincoln, Iowa, Arkansas, Israel, Scott Perry of
Opinion | What the Republican Votes Against Jim Jordan Mean
  + stars: | 2023-10-20 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
But what may well be the glue holding these factions together is the prospect of the tone of a Jordan speakership. Reports of intimidating phone-call campaigns to congressional offices, as well as threats of primary challenges directed at those Republicans withholding their votes from Mr. Jordan, may have solidified the opposition to him. Opposite of what his allies intended, these efforts in defense of Mr. Jordan may have triggered fears of the hard-edge tactics that could become common in a Jordan speakership. Mr. Jordan appears to be the victim of what amounts to a political autoimmune response from a decisive part of the House body. The writer formerly worked on Capitol Hill, including as legislative director for Senator Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan.
Persons: Jordan, G.O.P, , Jim Jordan, Biden, Chuck Cutolo Westbury, Carl Levin Organizations: Capitol, Democrat Locations: Jordan, N.Y, Michigan
Reps. Mariannette Miller-Meeks and Nick LaLota voted against Jim Jordan for speaker on Wednesday. AdvertisementAdvertisementTwo Republican representatives said they've received death threats since they voted against fellow GOP Rep. Jim Jordan for speaker of the House. "My vote card belongs to me and the people of NY's First Congressional District," LaLota wrote. In response to the series of threats and vitriol spewed at Miller-Meeks, LaLota, and Bacon in recent days, Jordan wrote online that he condemns "all threats against our colleagues." That first occurred on Tuesday, when 18 Republicans voted for candidates other than Jordan and sunk his first speaker bid.
Persons: Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Nick LaLota, Jim Jordan, Don Bacon, , they've, Jordan's, Lee Zeldin, LaLota, Miller, Angie, Jordan, Bacon Organizations: Service, GOP, New York Rep, Congressional, WTC Health Fund, Flood Insurance, Politico, Republican Rep, Miller, Washington Post Locations: Jordan
As much of a struggle as it was for Mr. Biden to work across party lines with Kevin McCarthy when he was speaker, a Jordan speakership would be a nightmare in the view of the president’s aides. Mr. Jordan, dubbed a “legislative terrorist” by former Speaker John A. Boehner, a fellow Republican, has long preferred bomb throwing to deal making and could push for Mr. Biden’s impeachment, government shutdowns and other moves at odds with the White House. Mr. Biden has resolutely refused to comment at any length about the chaos in the House, sticking by the old view that it is up to Congress to determine its own leadership, not the executive branch. When Mr. Jordan jumped into the speakership race a couple of weeks ago, Mr. Biden said he would work with whoever won. “They have the majority in the House,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, told reporters on Air Force One on the way to Israel on Tuesday.
Persons: Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, John A, Boehner, Mr, , I’ll, ” Karine Jean, Pierre, White Organizations: Republican, White, White House, Air Force, House Republicans Locations: Israel
Rep. Jim Jordan again fell short on Wednesday in his bid to become speaker, his prospects growing dimmer as time wore on. Twenty-two House Republicans voted against the Ohio Republican, as his opposition grew from a day prior, spelling trouble for his path forward in the chamber. Adding to Jordan’s troubles was a pledge by lawmakers to support Jordan in the first round as a good-faith show of support to their party’s speaker nominee – but not necessarily beyond. “This is the fight – which Jim Jordan represents – to end the status quo, and it ain’t easy,” Perry said. A group of Republicans on Wednesday were reportedly eyeing moving forward with a motion to empower Rep. Patrick McHenry, who was designated speaker pro tempore when former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Jordan’s, Scott Perry, ” Perry, , Tom Cole, you’re, Patrick McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, McHenry Organizations: Republicans, Ohio Republican, Republican, Oklahoma Republican, Wednesday, , Democrats Locations: Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Jordan, , Oklahoma
Retired DC Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone does not want Rep. Jim Jordan to be speaker. Fanone said he thinks the "Republican Party just needs to be destroyed." "When I think about Jim Jordan, I think about when Donald Trump made those now infamous statements to officials at the Department of Justice," Fanone said. "When I think about that, Jim Jordan is the first person that comes to mind. Fanone, who voted for Trump in 2016, said he now believes the Republican Party is "a party of violence, racism, sexism, homophobia, and anti-immigration."
Persons: Michael Fanone, Jim Jordan, Fanone, Jordan, , Donald Trump's, who's, Trump's, Trump, Donald Trump, it's, there's Organizations: DC Metropolitan Police, Republican Party, Service, Washington, Capitol, Trump, GOP Rep, of Justice, Department of Justice Locations: Maryland, Jordan
Lawmakers take to the House floor Tuesday to try to resolve their ongoing speaker standoff that has left the chamber without a leader for two weeks since Kevin McCarthy’s ouster. House Republicans nominated Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio for the post after their initial nominee bowed out of the race amid deep divisions within the conference. But the House Judiciary Committee chairman forged ahead anyway, as lawmakers grew impatient about the stalemate. Typically, some lawmakers pledge their vote in the first round as a good-faith show of support to their party’s speaker nominee. But it’s not clear that those votes will remain in place if the nominee does not prevail on an initial ballot.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy’s, Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Jordan’s, Steve Scalise’s, ” Jordan, , Donald Trump, Trump’s, ” He’s, Trump, Jordan “, McCarthy Organizations: Republicans, Caucus, GOP Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Manhattan, Jordan
Rep. Jim Jordan received his party’s nomination for speaker on Friday, becoming the second nominee after Majority Leader Steve Scalise abruptly abandoned his bid for the role a day earlier. The Ohio Republican fell more than 60 votes short of the threshold needed to become speaker in a test vote on Friday. Jordan, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, was known for years as an outspoken critic of leadership positioned squarely among the party’s right flank. Still, some moderates, along with Democrats, staunchly oppose a Jordan speakership, making a bipartisan path forward possible. Some have floated a bipartisan effort to empower Rep. Patrick McHenry, who has been serving as speaker pro tempore since McCarthy’s ouster, or even elect the North Carolina Republican as speaker.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy’s, Jim Jordan, Steve Scalise, he’s, Dan Crenshaw, Jordan speakership, Jordan, Crenshaw, ’ “, , McCarthy, Kevin Hern, Mike Johnson of, Patrick McHenry, McCarthy’s, Hakeem Jeffries, ” Jordan, , Mike Turner, balk Organizations: GOP, The Ohio Republican, Committee, , CNN, House Republicans, Fox News, North Carolina Republican, NBC, Democrats, Republican Conference, Ohio Republican, CBS, Capitol Locations: Jordan, Texas, Oklahoma, Mike Johnson of Louisiana, Ohio, Israel
"If Jim Jordan becomes Speaker, it is very unlikely that Congress will do anything on big tech in the near future," said Jon Schweppe, a policy director at the conservative American Principles Project. As Jordan's internal campaign gained momentum on Monday, Washington's thousands of lobbyists raced to determine how a Jordan speakership might impact their clients' bottom lines. "Instead, you'll see more performative anger over petty issues, designed to redirect attention away from the things that could actually hold big tech accountable," said the lobbyist. As chairman of the powerful House Judiciary Committee, Jordan has accused tech companies of censoring conservatives on their platforms. For big tech companies, the prospect of bipartisan antitrust legislation passing in Congress would amount to a far more urgent threat to their businesses than a partisan content moderation bill.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Joseph R, Biden, Jr, Tom Williams, Jim Jordan of, Jon Schweppe, Jordan, Meta, he's, Adam Kovacevich, Josh Edelson Organizations: Committee, Cq, Inc, Getty, Apple, CNBC, Republican, Judiciary, Press, Amazon, Google, Biden, of, Worldwide, Conference, AFP Locations: Ohio, Rayburn, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Cupertino , California
To win, he'll need support from nearly every House Republicans, having few votes to spare in a chamber they only narrowly control. “One person says disruption," Jordan told The Associated Press in 2017. That helped him land a coaching job at Ohio State University before his election to the Ohio legislature in the mid 1990s. I never saw, never, heard of, never was told about any kind of abuse,” Jordan told Fox News in 2018, suggesting that the allegations against him were politically motivated. Jordan repeatedly cast doubt on the outcome of the contest while organizing the House Republican response.
Persons: Jim Jordan, John Boehner, he'd, Boehner, Jordan, Donald Trump, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan speakership, Liz Cheney, ” Cheney, ” Jordan, , Bob Taft, , Richard Strauss, Strauss, ” Adam DiSabato, DiSabato, “ Jim Jordan, “ He’s, Polly, I’m, ’ ”, Matt Huffman, Joe Biden, Biden, corruptly, Trump, Scott Perry, Bryan Cutler, Mike Pence, Cassidy Hutchinson, Mark Meadows, ” Trump, Hutchinson Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Republican Party, Republican, Republicans, Capitol, Ohio State University, Associated Press, University of Wisconsin, GOP, Republican Gov, Caucus, Ohio State, Fox News, Congress, Trump, White, Committee, House Intelligence, Locations: , Dayton, Ohio, Columbus, Congress, Washington, Russia, House, Pennsylvania
But Jordan, like Scalise and McCarthy before him, faces an uphill battle to unify the conference. With a razor-thin GOP majority in the House, he’ll need the support of nearly every Republican to become speaker. Lawmakers instead were expected to head home for the weekend before returning for a speaker vote early next week. With Trump’s endorsement, some House Republicans coalesced around Jordan, while others touted him as a change to the status quo. Still, among many moderates, a Jordan speakership is unthinkable.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Steve Scalise, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Austin Scott –, Scalise, McCarthy, – Jordan, ” McCarthy, “ We’ve, Donald Trump, Trump’s, ” He’s, haven’t, Richard Hudson, Jordan “, , ” Hudson Organizations: Ohio, Rep, Georgia Republican, Republican, GOP, , Committee, Ohio Republican, Caucus, Republicans, National Republican, , Democrats, Capitol Locations: Georgia, Ohio, Jordan, America
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