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President Biden called on Congress to pass an aid package to fund wars in Ukraine and Israel. The president is expected to send to Congress a wide-ranging supplemental funding request for roughly $100 billion, people familiar with the discussions said. The request will include aid for Israel, Ukraine, countries in the Indo-Pacific region and border security. It couldn't be determined how soon an aid package would move through Congress as House Republicans are still wrangling over who will be the next speaker.
Persons: Biden Organizations: House Republicans Locations: Ukraine, Israel
Rep. Jim Jordan became the latest speaker nominee to bow to the unruly House Republican conference after a week of division and disagreement about how to move the chamber forward. After two failed speaker ballots, the Ohio Republican is not expected to pursue another vote on Thursday, instead backing a proposal to empower Rep. Patrick McHenry as temporary speaker, likely until the end of the year. Without a speaker, the House has been unable to approve a resolution supporting Israel or consider aid to the country. The Week in Cartoons Oct. 16-20 View All 6 ImagesThe move is expected to go to a House vote with a resolution introduced by moderate Republicans. It's outrageous.”Greene expressed disappointment in Jordan backing the resolution to empower McHenry as “some sort of a short term speaker,” saying “we voted for him to be our speaker nominee.”
Persons: Jim Jordan, Patrick McHenry, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Lawmakers, Hakeem Jeffries, , McHenry, McCarthy, McCarthy’s, Marjorie Taylor Greene, ” Greene, Organizations: Republican, Ohio Republican, Republicans, North Carolina Republican, White, Locations: Ohio, Israel, McHenry, Jordan
CNN —The House remains paralyzed with no end in sight to the Republican leadership crisis as GOP Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio continues his bid for speaker despite facing stiff resistance. The House could hold a third vote for speaker as soon as Thursday afternoon, though no vote has been officially scheduled yet. Tensions are rising among House Republicans as pressure grows to find a way to resolve the standoff. Some of Jordan’s opponents have predicted that the Ohio Republican will lose even more support in Thursday’s speaker vote. There were four new Republican votes against Jordan and two that flipped into his column.
Persons: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Jordan, Wednesday’s, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Steve Scalise’s, Patrick McHenry of, Donald Trump Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, Ohio Republican, Republicans, Caucus, Judiciary Committee Locations: Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, Jordan
Biden Urges Unity Behind Aid to U.S. Allies
  + stars: | 2023-10-19 | by ( Susan Milligan | Oct. | At P.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +4 min
He said he would ask Congress on Friday for a combined security funding package – described at being around $100 billion for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and the U.S.-Mexico border – to help Ukraine and Israel defend themselves. Biden warned that Putin would not stop there, perhaps moving to Poland or another NATO nation and escalating the conflict. NATO's charter says that if one member nation is attacked, all of NATO will come to that member's aid. Biden called for unity in the United States, including an intolerance for both antisemitism and Islamophobia in the wake of the Hamas attack. But he said it was imperative that the United States take the lead during the separate crises he said were related by the common theme of defending democracy and the dignity of people.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Vladimir Putin's, ” Biden, Israel –, – Biden, Putin, Israel, grousing Organizations: NATO, West Bank, Hill, Israel, Republicans Locations: United States, U.S, Ukraine, Israel, America, Taiwan, Mexico, Poland, Gaza, Hamas
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
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
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe don't see a path for Rep. Jim Jordan to become House Speaker, says Axios' Mike AllenMike Allen, Axios co-founder, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the race for House Speaker, after Rep. Jim Jordan failed to win enough votes for a second time, what comes next for House Republicans, and more.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Axios, Mike Allen Mike Allen Organizations: House, House Republicans
The anonymous text messages warned her husband – who has been a vocal holdout against Jordan – to back the Ohio Republican. Jordan on Wednesday condemned the death threats, saying “it’s just wrong.”“It should never happen,” Jordan said as he left his office Wednesday night. Womack derided what he called the “attack, attack, attack” tactics of Jordan allies against his Republican opponents. “Frankly, just based on what I’ve been through – I can only speak to myself and what my staff has been through over the last 24 or 48 hours – it is obvious what the strategy has been: Attack, attack, attack. There have also been pro-Jordan robocalls targeting voters in Rep. Carlos Gimenez’s district as well as other members’ district, according to the Florida Republican’s office.
Persons: Jim Jordan’s, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Kay Granger, Nick LaLota, Steve Womack, Arkansas, there’s, Don Bacon’s, , Jordan –, , , won’t, ” Jordan, Kevin McCarthy’s, Jordan, “ it’s, “ It’s, It’s, Womack, Carlos Gimenez’s, Gimenez, McCarthy, Steve Scalise’s, Scalise Organizations: CNN, GOP, . New York Rep, , Nebraska Rep, Ohio Republican, House Republican, Wednesday, Republicans, Conservative, Republican, Rep Locations: Iowa, Jordan, , Florida
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
But unless you have 217 votes to get behind that idea, it’s not a winning idea," LaLota said in an interview. D'Esposito said he was not sure that Jordan would support a stopgap measure known as a continuing resolution, an outcome becoming increasingly likely, adding: "none of us have crystal balls, but it's pretty clear where we're headed." CONTEXT* The prior Republican speaker, Kevin McCarthy, was ousted after passing the current stopgap funding measure on Sept. 30 with Democratic support, angering hardline Republicans. * Jordan was an architect of the 2013 shutdown over funding former President Barack Obama's Medicare reforms, and he supported the 2018 shutdown over funding for former President Donald Trump's border wall. Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; editing by Grant McCoolOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Jim Jordan's, Nick LaLota, Anthony D'Esposito, LaLota, That's, it’s, D'Esposito, Barack, Donald Trump's, Moira Warburton, Grant McCool Organizations: Rep, U.S, Capitol, U.S . House, New, Prevent Government, Democratic, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, U.S, New York City, Ohio, Washington
Progressive activist and independent presidential candidate Cornel West received a maximum campaign donation from Republican megadonor Harlan Crow, West's latest fundraising report shows. Crow made the $3,300 donation in August, weeks before West abandoned his bid for the Green Party nomination to run as an independent. Almost 15% of registered voters said they would vote for a third party or independent candidate when given the explicit choice in an NBC News poll last month. By comparison, less than 2% of voters in 2020 cast a ballot for a candidate other than Biden or Trump. Federal election filings show real estate developer Crow gave to Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie in the last quarter, as well as to GOP members of the Senate and House.
Persons: Cornel West, Harlan Crow, Crow, West, , , Joe Biden, Biden, Donald Trump, Crow’s, Clarence Thomas, Thomas, Chris Christie, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Republican, Green Party, Princeton University, NBC, Biden, Trump, Supreme, House Locations: Texas, Dallas
Jordan secured just 200 Republican votes on Tuesday. "I don't think anybody in here on any issue of any substance would have to guess where Jim Jordan is going to stand. He simply tells you straight up," Republican Representative Tom Cole said as he nominated Jordan for speaker ahead of the vote. Potential candidates include Representative Tom Emmer, currently the No. 3 House Republican.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Patrick McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, We've, Let's, Newt Gingrich, John Boehner, Mike Kelly, McHenry, Hakeem Jeffries, Tom Emmer, Jordan's, dissemble, Tom Cole, Donald Trump, Boehner, Joe Biden's, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Katharine Jackson, Makini Brice, Susan Heavey, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Grant McCool, Nick Zieminski Organizations: U.S . House, Republicans, Democrats, Republican, Democratic, U.S . Rep, Representatives, White, Senate, New, Committee, Biden, Thomson Locations: U.S, East, Ukraine, Jordan, Washington, McHenry
That temporary solution could also buy more time for Jordan to line up support for the job after that point. "I think it gets more and more difficult for him every day," said Republican Representative Mario Diaz-Balart, who opposes Jordan. Jordan, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, could be in trouble if more Republicans vote against him in a second ballot. At least one Republican who voted against him on Tuesday, Representative Doug LaMalfa, said he would vote for Jordan on the second ballot. 3 House Republican.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Patrick McHenry, We've, Let's, Mike Kelly, McHenry, Hakeem Jeffries, Kevin McCarthy, Mario Diaz, Balart, Newt Gingrich, John Boehner, Donald Trump, Tom Emmer, Read, McCarthy, Doug LaMalfa, Boehner, Joe Biden's, Kay Granger, Jordan's, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Katharine Jackson, Makini Brice, Susan Heavey, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Grant McCool, Nick Zieminski Organizations: U.S . House, Republican, Democratic, Republicans, U.S . Rep, Representatives, CNBC, Caucus, Committee, Biden, White, Thomson Locations: U.S, East, Ukraine, Jordan, McHenry, Washington
Rep. Jim Jordan failed a second attempt at being elected speaker after 22 Republicans voted against him. Photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/ShutterstockWASHINGTON—GOP Rep. Jim Jordan failed again to win enough votes to be elected House speaker, as divisions hardened for House Republicans, with some lawmakers pursuing new paths to break the impasse that has paralyzed the chamber. More than two weeks after former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) was ousted, Republicans remained gripped in a fierce internal struggle over his successor. Jordan said he would keep up his campaign, but pushed off any further voting until Thursday at the earliest as mounting GOP defections on his second ballot left Republicans snarled into warring factions over what should happen next.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jim Lo Scalzo, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, snarled Organizations: WASHINGTON, GOP, House Republicans, Republicans Locations: Calif
House Republicans appear to be warming to a novel proposal that would empower the speaker pro tempore, given their inability to elect a leader. The idea appears particularly popular among Republicans who opposed Jordan on the initial ballot. But the move would require the backing of a majority of the chamber, likely necessitating the support of Democrats. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has made clear that Democrats are open to a bipartisan path forward. “I have respect for Patrick McHenry, I think he is respected on our side of the aisle,” Jeffries said when asked about the possibility of empowering the North Carolina Republican.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Patrick McHenry, Jordan, Lori Chavez, Biden, Pro Tempore McHenry, Carlos Gimenez, Newt Gingrich, McHenry, John Boehner, chimed, , Hakeem Jeffries, ” Jeffries, Organizations: Republicans, Republican, Republican Conference, Pro Tempore, , Florida Republican, North Carolina Republican Locations: Oregon, Florida
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House plans to return for a second round of balloting for House speaker on Wednesday morning as Jim Jordan fights to win over his many holdouts for the job to replace the ousted Kevin McCarthy. The House had never ousted its speaker before Kevin McCarthy, and the lawmakers are in rarely tested terrain. Two former Republican House speakers, Newt Gingrich and John Boehner, have come out in support of the idea. Gingrich said that while he likes Jordan, he has “no faith” the nominee can get much beyond the 200 votes he won in the first vote. Both were chased to early retirement by threats of ouster from right-flank insurgents like those who toppled McCarthy.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Jim Jordan’s, McCarthy, Patrick McHenry of, Newt Gingrich, John Boehner, Gingrich, ” Gingrich, Fox News ’ Sean Hannity, Boehner, Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republican, Trump, GOP, Republican House, Republicans, Fox News Locations: Patrick McHenry of North Carolina
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
At a town hall-style event hosted by the right-wing broadcaster Newsmax on Tuesday, Mike Pence was asked questions about Israel, Ukraine and the disarray among House Republicans — all of which he answered in familiar ways. But he was not asked about the one subject that may now matter more than any of his policy views: his campaign’s perilous financial state. A campaign finance report that Mr. Pence filed over the weekend painted a dire picture. The former vice president had just $1.2 million in his campaign account, a skimpier reserve than any of the six Republican rivals he shared a debate stage with last month. Mr. Pence has struggled to achieve the goal he announced when he rolled out his campaign in June — to “reintroduce” himself to voters as his own man, allowing him to step out from the shadow of Donald J. Trump.
Persons: Mike Pence, Republicans —, Pence, , , Donald J, Trump, Reagan Organizations: Republicans, Republican Locations: Israel, Ukraine
The vote for House speaker, once a formality in Congress, has devolved into another bitter showdown for the gavel. Bipartisan groups of lawmakers have been floating ways to operate the House by giving greater power to the interim speaker, Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., or another temporary speaker. The House had never ousted its speaker before McCarthy, and the lawmakers are in rarely tested terrain. “We can’t sit around and suck our thumbs and hope the world will wait until the House Republicans get their act together,” Gingrich told Fox News' Sean Hannity on his show. “Jim Jordan will be a great speaker,” the former president said outside a courthouse in Manhattan, where he is facing business fraud charges.
Persons: , Jim Jordan, Donald Trump, Jordan, Jordan's, Kevin McCarthy, “ We're, ” Jordan, Hakeem Jeffries, Jeffries, Patrick McHenry, McCarthy, , Newt Gingrich, ” Gingrich, Sean Hannity, John Boehner, , Hannity, “ Jim Jordan, Joe Biden, Jordan’s, Don Bacon, Murmurs, Steve Scalise, Mario Diaz, appropriator, Ken Buck, Biden, Trump, Kevin Freking, Mary Clare Jalonick Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republicans, Capitol, Democratic, GOP, Republican, Fox News, Trump, Democrat, Biden, Caucus, Ohio State University, Associated Press Locations: Ohio, New York, R, Manhattan, Ken Buck of Colorado, Jordan, Ukraine, 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
Jordan's bid to become speaker appeared to be in deep trouble Wednesday, after he failed to secure the gavel by a wider margin than expected in the Tuesday vote. On that ballot, 20 Republicans publicly voted against the Judiciary Committee chairman, and 200 voted for him. Jordan's second bid already appeared doom to fail early Wednesday afternoon with at least nine Republicans voting against him so far, more than the congressman can afford to lose. Other Republicans voted for Lee Zeldin, who left Congress in January. "By empowering Patrick McHenry as Speaker Pro Tempore we can take care of our ally Israel until a new Speaker is elected."
Persons: Jim Jordan, Elise Stefanik, Jim Jordan's, Jordan's, Tom Cole of Oklahoma, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Cole, McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Lee Zeldin, Patrick McHenry of, Dave Joyce, Ohio, McHenry, Joyce, Patrick McHenry, Israel Organizations: Republican, House Republican, U.S, Capitol, Ohio Republican, GOP, Republicans, NBC News, NBC, Pro Tempore Locations: Ohio, Patrick McHenry of North Carolina
Rep. Jim Jordan should get ready to move on, according to fellow Republican Chris Christie. "My own party looks childish," Christie said on "Squawk on the Street," regarding the disarray among House Republicans. Christie predicted that Jordan would fail to convert enough of the 20 House Republicans who voted against him in the first ballot Tuesday. Jordan in that initial vote won just 200 of the 217 votes he needed to become speaker. You know, we have Israel aid, Ukraine aid, aid to Taiwan, border security and a budget all to get done.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Chris Christie, Jordan, gavel, Christie, who's, He's, Steve Scalise, Patrick McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, Donald Trump, Trump, Ron DeSantis, Vivek Ramaswamy Organizations: CNBC, Ohio Republican, Republicans, Republican, Florida Gov Locations: Ohio, Ukraine, Taiwan, R
As the parties have grown racially, religiously, and socially distant from one another, a new kind of social discord has been growing. The increasing political divide has allowed political, public, electoral, and national norms to be broken with little to no consequence. Institutions that empower partisan minorities can become instruments of minority rule. And they are especially dangerous when they are in the hands of extremist or antidemocratic partisan minorities. Its political system spreads power out very broadly, in ways that give many individual players the power to stop things.
Persons: Lilliana Mason, Johns Hopkins, Trump, , Steven Levitsky, Daniel Ziblatt, “ Vetocracy, ” Francis Fukuyama, Stanford’s, Fukuyama, ” Fukuyama Organizations: American, Harvard, Constitution, Global, Politics Today, Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, House Republicans Locations: America, U.S
Steel Supports Extremism,” the billboard reads. “Stop the extremism.”The advertising campaign, paid for by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, is part of a broad effort by Democrats to target Republicans like Ms. Steel, who represent congressional districts that President Biden won in 2020. lawmakers have stood on the House floor this week and cast their votes to put Mr. Jordan second in line to the presidency. Another group, the Congressional Integrity Project, began a digital ad campaign this week in those same districts, focusing on Mr. Jordan and his attempts to overthrow the 2020 election. “Every House Republican who votes for Jim Jordan to be speaker of the House should be held accountable for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, his role in the Jan. 6 fake electors plot, and his continued attacks on our democracy,” said Kyle Herrig, the executive director of the advocacy organization.
Persons: Michelle Steel, Donald J, Trump, Jim Jordan, , Steel, Biden, Jordan, , Kyle Herrig Organizations: Congressional, Republican, Steel, Progressive, Ms Locations: Buena Park, Ohio
In Ohio, Jordan is a hometown boy whose Ohio State University wrestling coach title, conservative policies and never-say-die persona on Capitol Hill have earned him more devotion than he's currently receiving in Congress. It was a common theme on a cloudy fall day in downtown Urbana, Ohio — an oasis of cafes and antique stores in the sprawling, rich farmland that makes up most of Jordan’s district. Sherry Vaught, a Democratic mayoral candidate in Mansfield, had harsh criticism for the Ohio congressman as his possible speakership looms. JD Knopp, an 18-year-old resident of Mechanicsburg, Ohio just outside Urbana, said he thinks Jordan will make a great leader for a divided Republican party. Whether Jordan becomes speaker won't affect his opinion, but it might change how he views those who keep the congressman from winning the speakership.
Persons: Jim Jordan, isn't, Jordan, Donald Trump —, He's, he's, , , Betty Lemmon, Jordan's, Joe Biden, Cynthia Leach, Jordan “, Russell Dye, Dye, Sherry Vaught, he’s, Vaught, Herb Asher, Sen, J.D, Vance, ” Asher, JD Knopp, Knopp, ” Knopp, ” ___ Samantha Hendrickson Organizations: , Democratic, Freedom Caucus, House Republicans, Ohio State University, Trump, Jordan, Associated Press, Capitol, Republican, Social Security, U.S . House, The Ohio State University, America Statehouse News Initiative, America Locations: URBANA, Ohio, Washington, Champaign County, Jordan, Urbana , Ohio, Jordan’s district, It's, Ohio’s, , Mansfield, Mechanicsburg , Ohio, Urbana
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