Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Jim Jordan of"


25 mentions found


U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) (R) talks to Speaker Pro Tempore Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC) as the House of Representatives prepares to hold a vote on a new Speaker of the House at the U.S. Capitol on October 18, 2023 in Washington, DC. Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio will back a plan to empower interim House Speaker Patrick McHenry until January, sources told NBC News and CNBC Thursday. The plan to temporarily empower McHenry to oversee the passage of legislation would act as a bridge until the deeply divided Republican conference can coalesce around a permanent replacement. Rep. David Joyce of Ohio said earlier this week that he plans to introduce a resolution to empower McHenry so the House can move forward with urgent business. But another source cautioned that the plan to temporarily empower McHenry may not have enough votes in the House.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Patrick McHenry, McHenry, Joe Biden, David Joyce, Ohio, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy of California, Steve Scalise, McCarthy Organizations: Rep, Pro Tempore, U.S, Capitol, Washington , DC, NBC News, CNBC, Democratic, NBC, House Republicans, GOP, Republican Locations: Washington ,, Ohio, Israel, Louisiana
The second failed effort on Wednesday by Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio to be elected House speaker added momentum to an idea that has been floated by lawmakers in both parties in recent days: Give Representative Patrick T. McHenry, the interim speaker, explicit power to conduct legislative business. Mr. McHenry is acting as temporary speaker under rules adopted after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that require the speaker of the House to come up with a list of people to fill the post in the event that it becomes vacant. When former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was booted out by a right-wing rebellion two weeks ago, the world learned that Mr. McHenry’s was the first name on his list. Many House aides believe that Mr. McHenry’s power is strictly confined to presiding over the election of a new speaker, as he has been doing this week. And as the turmoil around replacing Mr. McCarthy has continued, some members in both parties have been quietly discussing a way to explicitly grant Mr. McHenry permission to step in with full — or at least expanded — authority to run the House.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Patrick T, McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, McHenry’s, McCarthy Organizations: Mr Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio
On Wednesday, Rep. Jim Jordan failed to win the speaker's gavel for the second time. In a striking blow to his candidacy, even more House Republicans voted against him than last time. The House of Representatives held a second vote on the matter on Wednesday, one day after 20 House Republicans voted against their own party's nominee for the top job. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Republicans who voted against Jordan supported a range of other candidates, including McCarthy, Scalise, and former Rep. Lee Zeldin. Here are the 22 Republicans who voted against Jordan:
Persons: Jim Jordan, , Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Steve Scalise's, Scalise, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, — Rep, Scott Perry, Pennsylvania, Perry, Patrick McHenry, Lee Zeldin, Hakeem Jeffries Organizations: Republicans, Service, Ohio Republican, Twitter Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ukraine, Israel
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
Questions are resurfacing about his role in the sexual abuse scandal at Ohio State University. AdvertisementAdvertisementRep. Jim Jordan of Ohio could become the next speaker of the House, and questions are resurfacing about his role in a sexual abuse scandal at Ohio State University. Jordan has long denied any wrongdoing since the allegations were first brought forward in 2018, and at no point has any former wrestler accused Jordan himself of commiting sexual abuse. Jordan worked as a wrestling coach at Ohio StateA high school and college wrestling champion himself, Jordan worked as an assistant coach at Ohio State University in Columbus from 1986 to 1994 immediately after graduating college. AdvertisementAdvertisementThere is a chance, however, that Jordan will be deposed as part of an ongoing lawsuit related to the sexual abuse scandal.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Jordan's, , Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Rep, Nancy Mace, Here's, Richard Strauss, Mike DiSabato, Strauss, DiSabato, he'd, Dunyasha Yetts, we'd, Paul Ryan, Adam DiSabato —, Jim Jordan, Groveling, Rick Burlenski, He's, Burlenski, who've, Donald Trump's, Byron Donalds, I'm Organizations: Ohio State University, Service, NBC, Ohio State, Ohio General Assembly, NBC News, Caucus, OSU, CNN, POLITICO Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, South Carolina, Jordan, Columbus, Ohio, Jordan's, Washington, Florida
Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio lost a bid to become speaker on Tuesday after 20 Republicans refused to back him, prolonging a two-week fight that has paralyzed the chamber and underscored the deep Republican divisions in the House. The group included vulnerable Republicans from districts that President Biden won in 2020 and congressional institutionalists worried that Mr. Jordan, if elected, would demand extreme spending cuts, including to the military, potentially forcing a government shutdown. Here’s a look at the lawmakers who opposed Mr. Jordan on the first vote. Biden-district RepublicansThere are 18 Republicans in the House who represent districts Mr. Biden won in the last presidential election. John Rutherford of FloridaMike Simpson of IdahoSteve Womack of Arkansas Mr. Womack said he voted against Mr. Jordan on principle because Mr. Scalise was “kneecapped before he could win over his opponents.”McCarthy LoyalistsDoug LaMalfa of California The northern Californian said he would vote for Mr. Jordan on the second ballot.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Biden, Mr, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Steve Scalise, McCarthy’s, Don Bacon, Nebraska Lori Chavez DeRemer, Oregon Anthony D’Esposito, York Jen Kiggans, Virginia Nick LaLota, Mike Lawler, Jordan’s, Mario Diaz, Florida Jake Ellzey, Texas Tony Gonzales, Texas Kay Granger, John Rutherford of, John Rutherford of Florida Mike Simpson, Idaho Steve Womack, Womack, Scalise, “ kneecapped, ” McCarthy, Doug LaMalfa, John James of Michigan Andrew Garbarino, New York Carlos Gimenez, Florida Mike Kelly of Organizations: Mr, Biden, Republicans, Committee, New York, Florida Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania Wild Locations: Ohio, Louisiana, Oregon, York, Virginia, Florida, Texas, Texas Kay Granger of Texas, John Rutherford of Florida, Idaho, Arkansas, California, New, Indiana
On Tuesday, 20 Republicans voted against his candidacy – far more than the handful he could afford to lose given the party’s narrow majority in Congress. These are the House Republicans who voted against Jordan in each ballot:First ballot1. Don Bacon of Nebraska voted for former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy2. Anthony D’Esposito of New York voted for former Rep. Lee Zeldin of New York4. Kelly voted for former House Speaker John Boehner15.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Jordan –, Kevin McCarthy’s, Jordan, Don Bacon of Nebraska, Kevin McCarthy, Lori Chavez, McCarthy, Anthony D’Esposito, Lee Zeldin, Mario Diaz, Steve Scalise, Jake Ellzey, Mike Garcia, Andrew Garbarino, Carlos Gimenez, Tony Gonzales, Kay Granger, Mike Kelly, Jennifer Kiggans, Nick LaLota, Mike Lawler, John Rutherford of, Mike Simpson, Steve Womack, Ken Buck, Tom Emmer, John James of Michigan, Tom Cole, Doug LaMalfa, Victoria Spartz, Thomas Massie of, Bacon, Vern Buchanan, Byron Donalds, Buck, Chavez, DeRemer, D’Esposito, Diaz, Balart, Ellzey, Garcia, Drew Ferguson, Garbarino, Gimenez, Gonzales, Granger, James, Candice Miller, Kelly, John Boehner, Kiggans, Lawler, LaLota, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Rutherford, Simpson, Pete Stauber, Bruce Westerman, Womack Organizations: Washington CNN — Republican, House Republicans, New York, Michigan Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Oregon, New, New York, Florida, Louisiana, Texas, California, Virginia, John Rutherford of Florida, Idaho, Arkansas, Colorado, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Indiana, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Georgia, Iowa
Listen and follow The DailyApple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon MusicThe House of Representatives still has no speaker, crippling a vital branch of the government. And the Republican who seems to be in the strongest position to take the role, Jim Jordan of Ohio, was once called a “legislative terrorist” by a former speaker of his own party. Catie Edmondson, who covers Congress for The Times, talks through the latest turns in the saga of the leaderless House.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Catie Edmondson Organizations: Spotify, Republican, The Times Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio
CNN —Conservative Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio is bringing the House back to the floor Tuesday to vote on whether he will succeed ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy and finally end the chamber’s prolonged paralysis amid deep GOP divisions. But it’s not clear whether Jordan can be the one who unifies the fractured House Republican conference, with some lawmakers still opposed. Jordan can now only lose three votes, instead of four, but this is a temporary drop until the Florida congressman returns. “We need to get a speaker tomorrow,” Jordan said Monday after leaving a closed-door GOP conference meeting. Several Republicans – including from districts won by President Joe Biden – declined to say Monday evening whether they would vote for Jordan on the floor.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Gus Bilirakis, Bilirakis, , ” Jordan, , , holdouts, Ann Wagner of Missouri, Nicole Malliotakis, Jordan doesn’t, McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Kevin, Steve, Don Bacon of Nebraska, That’s, Mario Diaz, Joe Biden –, Scott Perry of, Scalise, ” Perry, Jim didn’t, Jim Jordan Organizations: CNN — Conservative Republican, Ohio Republican, Republican, Capitol, CNN, GOP, House Republicans, Trump, Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ohio, Florida, Washington, New York, Israel, Jordan
A table that shows the current tally for the most recent votes for speaker of the House. House Speaker Vote Results Representative Total Democrats Dem. The Constitution specifies that House members choose the speaker, but the speaker does not have to be a current or even a former representative. House Republicans nominated Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio in a closed-door vote last week, shortly after Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana withdrew his bid for the speakership. Below, we will keep track of how every representative votes.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Scalise McCarthy Zeldin Emmer Garcia Cole Massie Jeffries, Lee Zeldin, Steve Scalise, Kevin McCarthy, Matt Gaetz, McCarthy, Mr Organizations: Republicans, Dem, Jordan, McCarthy, Garcia, Cole, Massie, Jeffries, House Democrats Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, New York, Louisiana, Florida
Rep. Jim Jordan lost the first vote on his speakership bid on Tuesday. Here are some photos that captured the chaos of the first vote on the House floor in two weeks. AdvertisementAdvertisementRep. Jim Jordan of Ohio is struggling to become the next speaker of the House. AdvertisementAdvertisementBut Jordan's not done yet, and he's vowing to continue fighting for the gavel — just as McCarthy did in January. Here are some key moments from today's vote.
Persons: Jim Jordan, He's, , Jim Jordan of, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, McCarthy Organizations: Service, GOP Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden postponed a trip to Colorado on Monday to stay in Washington and focus on the growing conflict in the Middle East. Biden had been heading to the Colorado district of Rep. Lauren Boebert, where he was to visit CS Wind, the world's largest facility for wind tower manufacturing. The White House said just a few hours before Biden was set to take off for the trip that it would be rescheduled. Instead, Biden is expected to hold a series of high-level meetings with aides on Israel and the growing humanitarian concerns in Gaza. The president and other top administration officials have been traveling the country to promote their Investing in America agenda.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Lauren Boebert, Boebert, Kevin McCarthy of, Jim Jordan of, Donald Trump, McCarthy, Organizations: WASHINGTON, Rep, CS, Democratic, CS Wind, Congressional, House Republicans, Associated Press, NORC, for Public Affairs Research Locations: Colorado, Washington, Israel, Gaza, U.S, Ukraine, Pueblo, Pennsylvania, Kevin McCarthy of California, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Philadelphia, America
"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
Ideological battles among House Republicans are not a new phenomenon on Capitol Hill. But in recent years, conservative frustrations have boiled over, leading to the actual ouster of a GOP speaker. President Bill Clinton, right, shakes hands with House Speaker Newt Gingrich at the US Capitol on January 24, 1995. And the next Republican speaker, even a lawmaker as conservative as Jordan, will also have to navigate those choppy waters. House Republicans over the past 30 years could largely spare a few defections during the times when it held the majority, but with the current majority being so close, it no longer has that luxury.
Persons: Newt Gingrich's, , Kevin McCarthy of, Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan of, who's, Jordan, Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich, Doug Mills, Gingrich, Clinton, Bob Livingston of, Dennis Hastert of, George W, John Boehner of Ohio, Evan Vucci, John Boehner, Barack Obama, Boehner, Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Donald Trump —, Trump, Ryan, wouldn't, McCarthy, Kevin McCarthy, Scott Applewhite, Joe Biden, afflicting Organizations: Republicans, Service, House Republican Conference, House Republicans, America, Capitol, AP, GOP, House, Republican, Rep, Tea, Firebrand Republicans, Blue Dog Locations: Kevin McCarthy of California, Louisiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Georgia, Bob Livingston of Louisiana, Dennis Hastert of Illinois, Washington
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
House Republicans ended Friday without naming a new House speaker. Congress is historically motivated by deadlines, but there's nothing forcing House Republicans to move forward. Some more centrist House Republicans have floated cutting a deal with Democrats, but this is still very unlikely. We do know that a new speaker must be elected by a full House vote. AdvertisementAdvertisement"At this point, the acting Speaker pro temp is not the leader of his party," Green said.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, it's, here's, , Kevin McCarthy's, They've, Pro Tempore Patrick McHenry, Jim Jordan, Sarah Binder, J, Scott Applewhite, Jordan, Austin Scott, hasn't, Mike Collins, McHenry, He's, Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer, Matthew Green, Green, Patrick McHenry, McCarthy, couldn't, Jim McGovern, tempore, Binder Organizations: Service, Pro Tempore, Lawmakers, Republicans, Government, Brookings Institution, Republican, Georgia Republican, Democratic, House Republicans, , Capitol, North Carolina Republican, Financial Services, Politico, Catholic University, Republican Party, House Democrat Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ohio, Georgia, Jordan, meer, McHenry, Iran
Georgia Rep. Austin Scott is running against Jim Jordan to be the GOP nominee for speaker of the House. Rep. Austin Scott, a Georgia Republican who's served in Congress since 2011, announced on Friday that he would be seeking his party's nomination to be speaker of the House. "We are busily googling Austin Scott right now," another House Democrat told Axios reporter Andrew Solender. AdvertisementAdvertisementScott appears to be running primarily to deny the nomination to Jordan, who he blames for denying Scalise the nomination. "I don't necessarily want to be the speaker of the House," Scott told Punchbowl News on Friday, adding that he doesn't think "anyone can get 217 votes."
Persons: Austin Scott, Jim Jordan, He's, Jordan, , you've, Georgia Republican who's, Jim Jordan of, Steve Scalise, they'd, Scott, Andrew Solender, Mike Collins, Collins, they're, CNN's Manu Raju, I'm, Mike Pence Organizations: GOP, Service, Georgia Republican, , Democrat, House Intelligence Committee, Armed Services Committee, Agriculture Committee, House Republicans, Electoral, Punchbowl News Locations: Georgia, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arizona
Another candidate, Georgia Rep. Austin Scott, jumped into the race Friday just before Republicans met to choose a new nominee. The candidate to become speaker needs a majority of the votes from House members who are present and voting. POTENTIAL COMPLICATIONSThe main complication for House Republicans is their narrow 221-212 majority. While it has been the tradition for the speaker candidate to be a member of the House, it is not required. In January, a few Republican members even called out votes for former President Donald Trump, taking votes from McCarthy.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Scalise, Jim Jordan of, It’s, Jordan, Austin Scott, Scott, McCarthy, Patrick McHenry, , Hakeem Jeffries, Donald Trump, Nancy Pelosi Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S ., Louisiana, Republicans, Georgia Rep, North Carolina Rep, Republican, New York Rep, GOP, Capitol Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Israel, McHenry
GOP lawmakers have been scrambling to pick their next House Speaker. In a secret ballot held Wednesday, House Republicans nominated Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana. AdvertisementAdvertisementRep. Steve Scalise is withdrawing his run for the House Speaker position, The Washington Post reported on Thursday, just a day after House Republicans nominated the Louisiana representative for the role at the GOP conference. The decision came after Scalise failed to secure enough votes to win the Speaker role on Thursday, The Associated Press reported. AdvertisementAdvertisementBut on Wednesday the pick came down to Scalise and Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio.
Persons: Steve Scalise, Scalise, , Kevin McCarthy, Donald Trump, Jim Jordan of, Jordan, McCarthy, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Nancy Mace, Mace, David Duke, it's Organizations: Republicans, Service, Washington Post, GOP, Associated Press, CBS, Klux Klan, Republican Locations: Louisiana, Scalise, Jim Jordan of Ohio
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
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, talks to reporters after a House Republican Conference meeting in the U.S. Capitol on the speaker of the house nomination on Thursday, October 12, 2023. On this vote, Jordan came away with 152 votes for him, and 55 against, far short of the 217 he would need in a formal vote on the House floor. Following the second vote, lawmakers broke for the weekend, with few signs of what would come next. House Republicans had nominated Scalise Wednesday after he defeated Jordan in a narrow 113-to-99 internal party vote behind closed doors. The lower chamber is effectively in a state of paralysis, unable to move forward with urgent business until a House speaker is elected.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jim Jordan of, Steve Scalise, Jordan, Austin Scott of, Mark Alford, Scalise, Matt Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy of California, Joe Biden's, Dan Meuser, Newsmax, Tom McClintock of, McCarthy, McCarthy's, McClintock, Mike Lawler, , Emily Wilkins Organizations: Republican, U.S, Capitol, House Republicans, GOP, Committee, CNBC, Republicans, Rep, Russia, Jordan, York, NBC News Locations: Ohio, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Austin Scott of Georgia, R, Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Israel, Ukraine, Pennsylvania, Tom McClintock of California, Washington ,
CNN —Rep. Steve Scalise announced he was dropping out of the speaker’s race Thursday after House Republicans failed to coalesce behind him in the aftermath of Kevin McCarthy’s historic ouster. And Republicans scheduled a second members-only conference meeting for Thursday evening. But the opposition to Scalise as the next speaker only grew Thursday, with roughly 20 Republicans publicly opposing him. Scalise needs a majority of the House to be elected speaker, meaning he can only afford to lose four votes. The deadlock is leading to intensifying frustration as the House GOP looks no closer to coalescing around a speaker candidate.
Persons: Steve Scalise, Kevin McCarthy’s, , , there’s, Scalise, I’m, Nicole Malliotakis, Jim Jordan of, Jordan, “ I’m, Andy Ogles, Kevin McCarthy, “ He’s, ” McCarthy, didn’t, Thursday’s, ” Scalise, It’s, Hakeem Jeffries, Paul Ryan, Thomas Massie, Dan Crenshaw, ” Jordan, Jordan didn’t, Steve, Donald Trump, ” Trump, that’s, , Mark Green, Scalise can’t, Patrick McHenry of, Steve Womack, McHenry, Tom Cole of Oklahoma, can’t, Anna Paulina Luna, Joe Biden, Luna, don’t, Mario Diaz, Erin Houchin, Indiana Organizations: CNN —, Republicans, Louisiana Republican, GOP, New York Republican, Scalise, Fox, Republican, Kentucky Republican, CNN, Ohio Republican, Fox News Radio, Israel, Wednesday, Democrats, Republicans Democrats, Florida Republican, , ” Republican Locations: , Louisiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Tennessee, New York, Kentucky, Dan Crenshaw of Texas, Scalise, Israel, Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, Arkansas, , Florida
Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) waits to speak during a news conference after a caucus meeting with House Republicans on Capitol Hill May 10, 2023 in Washington, DC. The GOP majority leader from Louisiana does not appear to have the 217 Republican votes needed to win the speaker's gavel at this time given the tight margin in the closely divided House. The party remained divided after the internal ballot and the House adjourned Wednesday evening without a full floor vote on Scalise's candidacy. It is unclear when Scalise will face the House. Greene teased the prospect that Scalise will have to face multiple rounds of voting.
Persons: Steve Scalise, Scalise, Jim Jordan of, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Greene, Kevin McCarthy Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, Republican, GOP, Rep Locations: Washington , DC, Louisiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia
Rep. Steve Scalise, the GOP nominee to the next speaker of the House, has a rare blood cancer. "I guess it's the elephant in the room," said Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, who supports Scalise's speakership bid. Scalise was diagnosed in August with multiple myeloma, a form of cancer that's treatable but not curable, and is currently undergoing chemotherapy. "I will admit it's a concern," said Rep. Keith Self of Texas, who's among the Republicans who have yet to support Scalise. Burchett also suggested that Greene was getting more attention for her remark about Scalise's cancer because she's a woman.
Persons: Steve Scalise, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Scalise, , Tim Burchett, Scalise's, Andy Ogles, Greg Murphy of, Murphy, Russ Fulcher, David Schweikert, Greene, Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan of, Trump —, Jordan —, Steve, Trump, Louisiana Republican —, it's, Tom Tiffany of Wisconsin, Jordan, Keith Self, Bob Good, I've, Fulcher, who's, McCarthy, James, Burchett, she's Organizations: GOP, Trump, Service, Louisiana Republican, House Republicans, Scalise, Fox News Locations: Louisiana, Tennessee, Georgia, Greg Murphy of North Carolina, Russ Fulcher of Idaho, Arizona, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Texas, Virginia, chemo
And others, still, cited grievances with Scalise’s record or with maintaining the status quo by elevating the No. By Thursday afternoon, even lawmakers Scalise had previously flipped changed their minds, and his backing began deteriorating. And in a razor-thin GOP majority, Scalise needs the support of all but four of his conference to secure the gavel if every Democrat casts a ballot. “I love Steve Scalise,” Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee said heading into the conference meeting to determine the next steps. “I think we need to start voting.”Others said the disagreement should be fleshed out in private before proceeding to a floor vote.
Persons: Steve Scalise, “ We’re, Scalise, it’s, Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Max Miller of, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie of, Chip Roy, Nancy Mace, Carlos Gimenez, Lauren Boebert, Bob Good, Michael Cloud of, Barry Moore of, Lloyd Smucker, George Santos, George Santos of New York –, McCarthy, Matt Gaetz, speakership, Scalise’s speakership, , hasn’t, “ We’ve, Michael McCaul, , Andy Ogles, I’m, Steve, ” Greene, Ralph Norman of, Donald Trump – Organizations: Louisiana Republican, Scalise, – Rep, Max Miller of Ohio, George Santos of New York, speakership, Rep, Republican, Locations: mended, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Texas, South Carolina, Carlos Gimenez of Florida, Colorado, Virginia, Michael Cloud of Texas, Barry Moore of Alabama, Pennsylvania, George Santos of, Florida, California, George Santos of New York, Israel, Tennessee, Ralph Norman of South Carolina
Total: 25