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On Tuesday night, the Texas Republican endorsed Trump and called for GOP unity after the New Hampshire primary. “Twenty percent of GOP voters will not vote for him,” the Republican member said. “Independent voters think Biden is weak, but they hate Trump. And that’s exactly what Trump’s going to do,” Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican, told CNN. “And I think President Trump, in many people’s minds, is the answer to that status quo,” he said.
Persons: Sen, John Cornyn, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Trump’s electability, ” Cornyn, , he’s, , John Thune, CNN’s, Nikki Haley, Haley, Biden, Republican holdouts, Trump’s, GOP Sen, Deb Fischer, Brandon Williams, Joe Biden, ” Sen, Thom Tillis, They’re, Lindsey Graham of, Mike Rounds, Fischer, President Trump, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, ” McConnell, I’ve, I’ll, Susan Collins of, ” Collins, she’d, Collins, “ I’m, Donald Trump, J.D, Vance of, Haley’s, What’s, ” Vance, Mitt Romney, Markwayne Mullin, CNN’s Ted Barrett, Sam Fossum, Kristin Wilson, Haley Talbot, Lauren Fox Organizations: Texas Republican, New, CNN, Republicans, GOP, Republican, Trump, South Carolina Gov, House Republican, , Nebraska, North Carolina Republican, South Dakota Republican, Nebraska Republican Locations: New Hampshire, Iowa, New York, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine, Vance of Ohio, Utah, Washington, ” Washington, Oklahoma
On Tuesday, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer dropped out of the speaker race. Two representatives publicly said they wouldn't vote for him given his vote on gay marriage. In 2022, Emmer was one of 39 Republicans to support the Respect for Marriage Act. He dropped out of the race before the day even ended, with two GOP members saying he wasn't fit for the job due to his previous support for a federal gay marriage bill. Rep. Rick Allen, a Republican from Georgia, told reporters on Tuesday that he was "very concerned" about Emmer's same-sex marriage vote and would not be voting for him.
Persons: Tom Emmer, Emmer, , Joe Biden, Rick Allen, Allen, Jesus, Marjorie Taylor Greene, she's, Greene's refusals, — Emmer, Donald Trump, Mike Johnson of, Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan, Johnson Organizations: Republicans, Service, Republican, Minnesota, Representatives, Punchbowl News, Emmer, Fox News Locations: Minnesota, Georgia, Mike Johnson of Louisiana
Jim Jordan hemorrhaged even more votes during the third vote on his speakership bid on Friday. Here are the 25 Republicans who voted against him this time. AdvertisementAdvertisementBelieve it or not, Rep. Jim Jordan is still trying to become the next speaker of the House. Sure enough, 25 Republicans voted against Jordan on Friday, more than the 22 who voted against him on Wednesday and the 20 who voted against him on Tuesday. AdvertisementAdvertisementHere are the 25 Republicans who voted against Jordan on Friday:
Persons: Jim Jordan hemorrhaged, , Jim Jordan, Jordan, Brian Fitzpatrick, Tom Kean of, Marc Molinaro, Republican holdouts, he's, Tim Burchett, Kevin McCarthy, Patrick McHenry, Jordan's, McHenry, McCarthy Organizations: Service, The, The Ohio Republican, Republican, House Republicans, Republicans, GOP Locations: The Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tom Kean of New Jersey, New Jersey, Tennessee, Jordan, holdouts, McHenry
The wife of Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., has received anonymous, threatening text messages this week pressuring her to persuade her husband to support Jordan. Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., said his staffers have been "cussed out" in phone calls from Jordan supporters. But the bloc of roughly 20 anti-Jordan Republicans say that they aren't caving and that the hardball tactics are backfiring. Moments after Jordan was rejected on a second ballot for speaker Wednesday, Gimenez recounted a tense phone call with Jordan on Tuesday. Gimenez told reporters just off the House floor.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jim Jordan's, Republican holdouts, Jordan, Don Bacon, Rep, Steve Womack, Carlos Gimenez, Jordan robocalls, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, she'd, Miller, Gimenez, they're, he's, you've, I'd, , Kevin McCarthy, Jordan's Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Republican, GOP, Jordan Republicans Locations: Rayburn, Washington ,, Ohio, South Florida, Iowa
Rep. Jim Jordan's speakership bid has been thwarted — for now. Call it the revenge of the Republicans you've never heard of — the ones who aren't regularly featured on Fox News, who don't have massive social media followings, and who aren't known for styling themselves as right-wing crusaders. If Jordan's speakership bid ultimately fails, it will signify a stunning turnaround for a party that's been in thrall to its loudest voices since the ascent of Donald Trump in 2015. AdvertisementAdvertisement81 House Republicans — more than a third of the conference — voted for him anyway. 20 House Republicans voted against him on Tuesday, 22 voted against him on Wednesday, and even more were expected to vote against him on a potential third vote.
Persons: Jim Jordan's speakership, , Kevin McCarthy's, Matt Gaetz, Gaetz's, Jim Jordan, Republican holdouts, Republicans you've, aren't, McCarthy, Gaetz, Pro Tempore Patrick McHenry —, Jordan's, that's, thrall, Donald Trump, Austin Scott, Austin Scott of, Jordan, Scott, Republican who's, Steve Scalise's, Scalise, underscoring, Lauren Boebert, wasn't, Republicans —, — Gaetz, Chip Roy, Paul Gosar of, Kay Granger, Republicans who’s, Anna Moneymaker, Anthony D'Esposito, Steve Womack, who's, Sean Hannity, they've, Jordan hasn't, Austin Scott's, Jack Bergman, Tom Williams, Jack Bergman —, General Bergman, James Hogge, Dan Meuser Organizations: Republicans, Service, Rep, , Republican, Fox News, Ohio Republican, Pro Tempore, North Carolina —, GOP, Democrat, Georgia Republican, Freedom Caucus, New York Republicans, Republican Governance Group, Trump, Images Locations: Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, Austin Scott of Georgia, Colorado, Boebert, Texas, Paul Gosar of Arizona, Kay Granger of Texas, Arkansas, @RepKayGranger, Pennsylvania
Republicans control the House by a narrow 221-212 margin, and all Democrats are expected to vote against him. At least seven Republicans are expected to vote against Jordan, which would leave him short of the 217 votes he needs. "Jim is a tough person and is going to almost prosecute our conservative agenda through America," said Republican Representative Mark Alford. Should Jordan's bid for speaker stall, Republican rivals have identified several alternative candidates, including McHenry, who is presiding over the speaker vote, and No. 3 House Republican Tom Emmer.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Evelyn Hockstein, Republican Jim Jordan, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Juan Ciscomani, holdouts, McCarthy, Marc Molinaro, Joe Biden, Jim, Mark Alford, Donald Trump, Ted Lieu, Hakeem Jeffries, Patrick McHenry, decry, John Boehner, Steve Scalise, We've, Don Bacon, McHenry, Republican Tom Emmer, David Morgan, Makini Brice, Moira Warburton, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Gerry Doyle, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, House, Republican, U.S ., Caucus, Democrats, Tuesday, New, New York Republican, Democratic, Senate, Security, Committee, Biden, Ohio State University, Thomson Locations: Washington, U.S, Ohio, Israel, Ukraine, tangling, New York, America
US Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) speaks to members of the media at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on October 4, 2023. The renewed momentum came at a crucial moment for Jordan, whose candidacy seemed destined to fail late last week. After winning the internal, closed door nomination vote, Jordan still faced a bloc of around 50 House Republicans who opposed his speakership. Jim Jordan can do it," McCarthy said in a social post. President Joe Biden called the leadership vacuum in the House "dangerous" in an interview with CBS News that aired Sunday.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jim Jordan of, Republican holdouts, Jordan, Mike Rogers of, Ken Calvert of, Ann Wagner of Missouri, Carlos Gimenez of, Don Bacon of, Gimenez, Kevin McCarthy, Steve Womack, Mike Lawler, Mario Diaz, Matt Gaetz, McCarthy, Joe Biden, Biden, Michael McCaul, Steve Scalise Organizations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Representatives, Republican, Republicans, Armed Services, Mike Rogers of Alabama, NBC News, Carlos Gimenez of Florida, California Republican, Rep, Jordan, CBS News, Republican Party, Foreign Affairs, NBC, Texas Republican, GOP Locations: Washington ,, Ken Calvert of California, Don Bacon of Nebraska, Arkansas, York, Florida, Israel, Ukraine, Kyiv, Russia, United States, Texas, Louisiana
To become speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy was forced to make several concessions. He agreed to change House rules to allow any member to bring a motion to vacate the speakership. In January, just a few short months after an election where Republicans just barely gained majority control of the House of Representatives, McCarthy had emerged as the frontrunner to become the next House speaker. Traditionally, it only takes one ballot and less than one day to elect a speaker, and the victor only needs a simple majority vote to ascend to the speakership. If a simple majority of House members vote in favor, McCarthy will be removed from the post and replaced with a temporary, unknown speaker to preside over the chamber until a new speaker is formally elected.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, , Kevin McCarthy's, McCarthy, Nancy Pelosi, Matt Gaetz, renege Organizations: Service, Republican, Congress, Republicans, Democrats, GOP, Democratic
WASHINGTON (AP) — The threat of a federal government shutdown suddenly lifted late Saturday as President Joe Biden signed a temporary funding bill to keep agencies open with little time to spare after Congress rushed to approve the bipartisan deal. Political Cartoons View All 1190 ImagesIt’s been a sudden head-spinning turn of events in Congress after grueling days in the House pushed the government to the brink of a disruptive federal shutdown. The outcome ends, for now, the threat of a shutdown, but the reprieve may be short-lived. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who has championed Ukraine aid despite resistance from his own ranks, is expected to keep pursuing U.S. support for Kyiv in the fight against Russia. “All of us have a responsibility to lead and to govern,” said Republican Rep. Mike Lawler of New York.
Persons: Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy, ” Biden, McCarthy, “ We’re, ” McCarthy, Chuck Schumer, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Hakeem Jeffries, Mitch McConnell, , ” McConnell, Sen, Michael Bennet, ” Bennet, Republican holdouts, , Mario Diaz, Biden, McCarthy’s, Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump, Trump, Mike Lawler, Mike Quigley of, Colleen Long, Mary Clare Jalonick Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, Federal Aviation Administration, Senate, Democratic, Republicans, Hill, Republican, U.S, Kyiv, Russia, White House, Transportation Security Administration, Democrat, Congressional Ukraine Caucus, Associated Press Locations: Ukraine, United States, Washington, New York, Ky, Poland, Florida, America, Mike Quigley of Illinois
Republican hardliners have said they will not take up a Senate bill to fund the government through Nov. 17, which has advanced with broad bipartisan support, including that of top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell. Lawmakers are not considering cuts to popular benefit programs such as Social Security and Medicare. Former President Donald Trump, Biden's likely election opponent in 2024, has taken to social media to push his congressional allies toward a shutdown. A shutdown will also delay vital economic data releases, which could trigger financial market volatility, and delay the date that retirees learn how much their Social Security payments will rise next year. Social Security payments themselves would continue.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Craig Hudson, Joe Biden, Republican Mitch McConnell, Moody's, creditworthiness, McCarthy, Biden, Donald Trump, Biden's, Dan Crenshaw, Mike Garcia, Richard Neal, I've, Marc Molinaro, Moira Warburton, Scott Malone 私 Organizations: Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, U.S, Republicans, National Park Service, Securities and Exchange, Democratic, Republican, Social Security, Democrats, Reuters, Senate, Moderate, Social Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Mexico
A small band of Republican holdouts has prevented the Senate and the House from moving spending bills through their respective chambers. And instead of rolling out the red carpet for the Ukrainian president, Mr. McCarthy — who just months ago spoke forcefully about his commitment to Kyiv — now says Mr. Zelensky must convince him that supporting the fight against Russia is worth Congress’s money and time. I don’t think I have to commit anything,” Mr. McCarthy told reporters on Tuesday. The stance has put Mr. McCarthy out of step with other Republican leaders, like Senator Mitch McConnell, the minority leader, as well as the bulk of his own members in the House. They have argued that helping Ukrainian troops by budgeting for a steady flow of weapons is a moral imperative, and that Mr. Zelensky could help persuade their more skeptical colleagues of that necessity, if only the speaker would give him the chance.
Persons: Republican holdouts, McCarthy —, Kyiv —, Zelensky, Mr, McCarthy, Biden, Mitch McConnell Organizations: Republican, Senate, Kyiv, Russia, Republicans Locations: Russia, Ukraine
A federal government shutdown could happen in 13 days. But the Senate, and some House lawmakers, aren't onboard. The last government shutdown lasted for 35 days — the longest in US history — between December 22, 2018, and January 25, 2019. Still, the government is 13 days away from shutting down and it's unlikely the Senate will approve this resolution. AdvertisementAdvertisement"It's crystal clear a Gov't shutdown is coming," GOP Rep. Tony Gonzales wrote on X, formerly Twitter, on Sunday.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Kevin McCarthy, Tony Gonzales, Biden, holdouts, Joe Biden —, GOP Sen, Mike Braun Organizations: Conservative, Service, Caucus, Main Street Caucus, Republicans, GOP, Management, SNAP, Social Security, OMB, Senate, Politico Locations: Wall, Silicon, Texas, Mexico
We Hit the Debt Limit. What Happens Now?
  + stars: | 2023-05-08 | by ( Jeanna Smialek | Ashley Wu | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +12 min
Pass a timely deal Fail to reach an agreement Raise the debt limit Default on debt Congress can ... The debt limit was raised this way three times during the Trump administration and dozens of times during past presidencies. But House Republicans have made clear that they want stipulations in the form of spending cuts attached to this next debt limit increase. Pass a timely deal Fail to reach an agreement Potential market volatility Temporary suspension Delay the debate Raise the debt limit Default on debt Congress can ... DefaultRaise the debt limit Default on debt Potential loss of trust in U.S. bonds Default on debt Potential loss of trust in U.S. bonds Raise the debt limitMany on Wall Street think that the worst-case scenario would play out if the government missed an interest payment, leaving it in default on its debt.
Tucker Carlson won concessions from Kevin McCarthy in a deal that made him House speaker, per his texts. McCarthy needed 218 votes to win his bid to become House speaker, giving him a small margin of error. The result was 14 rounds of votes that failed to produce a House speaker, making it the most contested speaker election in more than 150 years. Grossberg discussed some of the conversations between her and Carlson regarding McCarthy's House Speaker election in an interview with CNN on Tuesday night. On January 7, the House held its 15th vote for House Speaker.
— Abortion bans in deeply conservative Nebraska and South Carolina both fell short of advancing in close legislative votes amid heated debates among Republicans, yet another sign that abortion is becoming a difficult issue for the GOP. In South Carolina, lawmakers voted 22-21 to shelve a near-total abortion ban for the rest of the year. Katie Glenn, the state policy director for Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, characterized the failure of both proposed abortion bans as disappointing. The failure to advance abortion restrictions has confounded conservatives who dominate both Nebraska and South Carolina and exposed a chasm on the issue of abortion within the GOP. Riepe and some Republicans across the country have noted evidence pointing to abortion bans as unpopular with a majority of Americans.
Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., walks out with House Republicans to speak about the passage of H.R. Goldman Sachs analysts wrote that their "base case remains for the debt limit deadline to fall in late July," as long as tax receipts only fall by 30%. This is the projected date the Treasury Department will exhaust the emergency measures it is taking to prevent a federal debt default. Instead, it is intended to serve as McCarthy's opening salvo in his looming negotiation with Biden over the debt limit and federal spending. Over the weekend, Emmer said that while the final bill might not be perfect, the alternative for a Republican House member would be worse.
WASHINGTON—The House will dive into its first week of substantive work with bills to cut Internal Revenue Service funding and investigate economic competition from China, after a leadership election that underscored Republican divides and the fragile position of Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.). Mr. McCarthy prevailed in his quest to be speaker of the Republican-controlled House shortly after midnight on Saturday. A small group of Republican holdouts had blocked him on 14 earlier ballots last week, turning a usually perfunctory process into a dayslong drama that previewed the potential for months of turmoil on spending issues in the narrowly divided chamber.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was stripped from committee assignments after joining Congress in 2021. Greene said Sunday her QAnon support was in the past and that she got sucked into things online. Host Howard Kurtz said Democrats stripped Greene of her committees in 2021 due to statements she made about conspiracy theories and her past support of QAnon. "Well, like a lot of people today, I had easily gotten sucked into some things I had seen on the internet," Greene said. Shortly after joining Congress, Greene was removed from committees due to statements she made related to violence against lawmakers and conspiracy theories.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene passed a phone with Donald Trump on the line to a GOP rebel amid the House speaker crisis. Kevin McCarthy was elected speaker of the House in the early hours of Saturday morning, ending days of chaos. Greene posted a photo on Twitter of herself trying to pass her phone to fellow GOP Rep. Matt Rosendale with the former president's initials "DT" appearing on the screen. CNN also reported that Trump called Rep. Andy Biggs, who then voted "present" on the 15th ballot rather than voting against McCarthy. While speaking to reporters after the House adjourned, McCarthy thanked Trump for his role in securing his victory.
Obviously, this is not a story about Washington, D.C., where Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s unsuccessful — and still ongoing — attempt to become speaker will go down in history. Gregory said he was joking around with state Rep. Tim O’Neal, a member of the Republican leadership, about tapping Rozzi to be speaker. State Democrats, however, list Rozzi as a Democratic speaker on their official website. House Republicans told NBC News they are not looking to work with Democrats to elect a more center-right speaker to govern their new majority. Gregory said the Pennsylvania election was "not really apples to apples" with the ongoing battle for control of the U.S. House.
Brian Kilmeade called the GOP holdouts blocking Kevin McCarthy from being speaker "insurrectionists." The "FOX & Friends" host immediately walked the comment back, going for "saboteurs" instead. The people that don't wanna vote for Kevin McCarthy." At least Kevin McCarthy agreed to some things, and didn't agree to other things." The "Fox & Friends" host did not single out by name the congresspeople he thought were "insurrectionists."
A group of 20 ultra-conservative Republicans continues to stonewall his leadership ambitions. More than half denied the 2020 election result and a handful are mentioned in the now-dissolved January 6 committee's report. But several of the political personalities at the heart of that attack are the same ones now holding the speakership hostage. All three lawmakers denied allegations that they were involved in planning the event. Meanwhile, the FBI seized the phone of Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania in August of last year.
WASHINGTON— Kevin McCarthy and his allies launched a new round of talks late Wednesday with a small but stubborn band of conservative holdouts who have blocked his bid for House speaker, reviving hopes of a possible deal following a second day without a winner. The discussions heated up after Mr. McCarthy didn’t reach the majority in three rounds of voting Tuesday, nor in another three Wednesday, which served to deepen doubts about his prospects and fuel talk of alternative GOP candidates.
Rep. Kevin McCarthy has lost six rounds of voting for House Speaker as of Wednesday night. Here are five ways the battle for House Speaker could potentially end. The GOP's slim majority in the House means McCarthy needs the support of nearly all Republicans to become speaker. Here are five potential ways the battle for House Speaker could end, with or without McCarthy assuming the position. House changes the rules to push McCarthy throughThe House could also in theory change the rules of voting for speaker.
WASHINGTON — Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., doesn't care that former President Donald Trump backs Kevin McCarthy for speaker of the House. "Endorsements don't matter to me," said Norman, one of 20 Republican holdouts who have blocked McCarthy, R-Calif., from winning the majority he needs on a series of deadlocked votes for House speaker. Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., another anti-McCarthy voter, took umbrage at Trump calling recalcitrants on behalf of the beleaguered House GOP leader. "I think it actually needs to be reversed; the president needs to tell Kevin McCarthy that, sir, you do not have the votes, and it’s time to withdraw." "But I don't think when you have eyes on an institution for years and you've made up your mind, I don't think President Trump or anyone else is going" to change it.
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