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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
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailU.S. aid and budget are the two big questions for next House Speaker, says PIMCO's Libby CantrillLibby Cantrill, PIMCO head of public policy, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss the likelihood of Rep. Jim Jordan going to a second round of voting after falling short in round one, the possibility for congress to allow the Speaker Pro Tempore to bring-in legislation, and the potential for automatic spending cuts in January.
Persons: PIMCO's Libby Cantrill Libby Cantrill, Jim Jordan Organizations: Pro Tempore
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
PoliticsJim Jordan falls short in first US House speaker votePostedCombative right-wing Republican Jim Jordan fell short on Tuesday (October 17) in a vote to serve as speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, but more votes were expected to follow that could wear down his opponents.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Republican Jim Jordan Organizations: Republican, U.S . House
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
The House of Representatives is set to vote on Jim Jordan's nomination for speaker on Tuesday afternoon, two weeks after the chamber ousted Kevin McCarthy from the top spot. Jordan was scrambling to shore up the votes needed to clinch the vote in the closely divided chamber. He can likely only lose a few GOP votes to win the nod. The House is scheduled to start voting at noon in what could become a showdown for the gavel. But with public pressure bearing down on lawmakers from Trump’s allies including conservative TV hosts, it’s unclear how long the holdouts can last.
Persons: Jim Jordan's, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Jim Jordan’s, McCarthy, Donald Trump's Organizations: GOP, Trump, Republicans, Ohio Republican, TV
PoliticsJim Jordan pushes his bid for Speaker ahead of votePostedHardline Republican Jim Jordan is set to take his sputtering bid for speaker to the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives this week, hoping to bulldoze opposition from dozens within his own party by applying pressure in a series of public votes.
Persons: Jim Jordan Organizations: U.S . House
Republican Rep. Jim Jordan failed to win enough support on the first ballot, losing 20 Republicans. Jordan, who chairs the powerful House Judiciary Committee, received 200 votes on the first ballot with 20 Republicans voting for other candidates. With full Democratic attendance and united opposition, Jordan could only afford to have lost three Republican votes. By at least one measure, Jordan would be the most conservative Speaker compared to the average House Republican in recent years. The 20 Republicans that have voted against Jordan thus far:Seven Republicans voted for House Majority Leader Steve Scalise: Scalise was briefly the party's nominee to become speaker before he withdrew from the race.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy's, Jim Jordan, , Jordan, Hakeem Jeffries, Rather, McCarthy, Jordan's, Gus Bilirakis, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Kay Granger, Rep, Steve Womack, Juan Ciscomani, Steve Scalise, Scalise, Mario Díaz, Tony Gonzales, Texas Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania John Rutherford of, Mike Simpson, Don . Bacon, Lori Chavez, Carlos Gimenez, Jen Kiggans, Doug LaMalfa, Mike Lawler, Lee Zeldin, Zeldin, Donald Trump's, Anthony D'Esposito Rep, Andrew Garbarino Rep, Nick LaLota Organizations: Republican, Republicans, Lawmakers, Service, Judiciary, Florida Republican, Democratic, Caucus, Jordan, Arkansas Republican, D.C, Seven, Florida Rep, Texas Rep, Texas Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania John Rutherford of Florida Rep, Idaho Rep, Arkansas Six, Nebraska Rep, Oregon Rep, Virginia Rep, California Rep, New, New York Three New York Republicans, Rep Locations: Florida, Ohio, Kay Granger of Texas, Arkansas, Texas, Texas Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania John Rutherford of Florida, Idaho, New York
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
Insider Today: Tech workers are bummed
  + stars: | 2023-10-17 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
AdvertisementAdvertisementIn today's big story, we're looking at why some tech workers don't love their jobs anymore. Many factors led to the shift, from significant layoffs in Big Tech to in-office mandates and financial pressure due to high interest rates. AdvertisementAdvertisement(Interestingly enough, Terrazas writes that workers in non-tech roles — like human resources and marketing — report the highest job satisfaction at Big Tech companies.) But it feels like tech workers themselves will end up having to do a bit of recalibration. Working in Big Tech has become a job like any other corporate gig.
Persons: Alyssa Powell, tech's, Aaron Terrazas, Terrazas, Insider's Hugh Langley, Grace Kay, Garry Gensler, Drew Angerer, Gary Gensler, Janet Yellen, it's, Satya Nadella, JASON REDMOND, ADAM GRAY, didn't, Israel, Don't, Rae Dunn, Jim Jordan, Jada Pinkett, Pinkett Smith, Will Smith, Goldman Sachs, Lockheed Martin, Johnson, Leah Kern, Joe's, Dan DeFrancesco, Naga Siu, Hallam Bullock, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Sigma, Insider Tech, Big Tech, Tech, Terrazas, SEC, Getty, LinkedIn, Tesla Edinburgh, Amazon, Republican, Bank of America Locations: Big, Israel, Ukraine, AFP, Tesla, Temple, El, New York City, York, San Diego, London, New York
Jordan, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, won the GOP's nomination for speaker in a secret ballot on Friday. Here's what to know going into the speaker's election:Political Cartoons View All 1211 ImagesWHEN IS THE SPEAKER ELECTION? House members are seated during the speakership vote. It takes a majority of the votes from House members who are present and voting. Once the roll call for speaker begins, members of the House are called on one by one to call out their choices.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Donald Trump, Hakeem Jeffries, It's, Kevin McCarthy, Jeffries, McCarthy, JORDAN, , Mario Diaz Balart, Steve Scalise, ” Rep, Thomas Massie, you’re, Organizations: WASHINGTON, — Republicans, Republican, State, Republicans, WHO, Locations: Ohio, New York, Israel, Ky
The refusal of some of them to go along with Mr. Jordan’s election was an unusual show of force from a group that more commonly seeks compromise and conciliation. Though Mr. Jordan failed to win a majority, 200 Republicans — including many of those more mainstream members — voted to give him the job second in line to the presidency. That was a remarkable show of support for Mr. Jordan, 59, who helped Mr. Trump try to overturn the 2020 election and has used his power in Congress to defend the former president. Mr. Jordan has a long track record of opposing compromise that prompted a previous Republican speaker to brand him a “legislative terrorist.”Representative Elise Stefanik, Republican of New York, formally nominated Mr. Jordan, a former wrestling champion, on the floor on Tuesday and cast his bruising style as a virtue. “Whether on the wrestling mat or in the committee room, Jim Jordan is strategic, scrappy, tough and principled,” she said.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Republicans ’, Jordan’s, Jordan, , Trump, Elise Stefanik, Jim Jordan, Organizations: Republicans, Republican Locations: New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRep. Jim Jordan loses Speaker vote as division among GOP persistsCNBC's Emily Wilkins joins 'The Exchange' to discuss Rep. Jim Jordan losing the first round of the Speaker vote, whether or not Rep. Jim Jordan will pursue another vote, and other candidates receiving votes.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Emily Wilkins Organizations: GOP
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
In that time, he's introduced 30 bills. According to Congress' online legislative tracker, Jordan's introduced just 30 bills in total throughout his time in office. As for amendments he's introduced regarding other members of Congress' legislation, the legislative tracker shows he's batting 1 for 17, amending a single bill in 2012 regarding renewable energy and biofuel. Though he's introduced very few bills while in office, Jordan's co-sponsored 949 pieces of legislation. Now, in October 2023, Jordan's on the verge of becoming speaker himself after House Majority Leader Steve Scalise dropped out of the race.
Persons: Jim Jordan, he's, , Jordan's, Jordan, John Boehner, Steve Scalise, it's, Kevin McCarthy Organizations: Service, Republican, Politico Magazine Locations: Washington, DC's
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
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
House meets to vote on Jim Jordan’s bid for speaker
  + stars: | 2023-10-17 | by ( Spencer Kimball | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
The U.S. House of Representatives gaveled into session Tuesday to vote on whether Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, will become its next speaker. The vote on Jordan's candidacy is scheduled to begin around 12:30 p.m. The deeply divided Republican conference has so far been unable to coalesce around a candidate for speaker after McCarthy's ouster. Jordan has said he wants the House to keep voting Tuesday until it chooses a speaker, suggesting Jordan intends to wear down his opposition on the House floor. The House has been leaderless for two weeks after a faction of eight Republicans led by Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida ousted McCarthy in an unprecedented no-confidence vote.
Persons: Jim Jordan, gaveled, Kevin McCarthy, Jordan, Steve Scalise, McCarthy, Matt Gaetz, McCarthy's, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Hakeem Jeffries Organizations: Republican, U.S . House, GOP, Rep, Ohio Republican Locations: Washington ,, Ohio, Florida, New York
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. China's renewed reboundChina's economic growth will return next year, Mark Makepeace, former head of benchmark giant FTSE Russell told CNBC. [PRO] Rising oil prices could boost non-energy stocksExogenous shocks, like supply cuts and the Israel-Hamas war, have forced oil prices upward. That's good news for energy stocks — but these non-energy, European stocks also stand to benefit when oil and gas prices rise, according to Bank of America.
Persons: China's, Mark Makepeace, Makepeace, Jim Jordan, Adam Kovacevich, Biden, Joe Biden, Antony Blinken Organizations: CNBC, Russell, Big Tech, Republican, U.S . House, Apple, Biden, of Progress, Israel U.S, Hamas, Bank of America Locations: Asia, Pacific, , New Zealand, China, Israel, Gaza
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
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJim Jordan loses House speaker vote: What's next for chaos in Congress? CNBC’s Brian Schwartz and Kim Wallace, 22V Research, join 'Power Lunch' to discuss all the drama ongoing in Washington.
Persons: Jim Jordan, What's, CNBC’s Brian Schwartz, Kim Wallace Organizations: Research Locations: Washington
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
It was unclear whether he would be able to unite his party enough to prevail in a floor vote expected on Tuesday. In a letter to Republicans, Jordan acknowledged those differences and promised to prioritize military and spending legislation. It was unclear how many Republican lawmakers still opposed Jordan's bid, sources familiar with internal Republican discussions said on Monday. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise, who won the endorsement last week but then withdrew after he was not able to consolidate support. 3 House Republican Tom Emmer, conservative Representatives Kevin Hern and Byron Donalds as well as acting Speaker Patrick McHenry, who is presiding over the speaker election.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Republican Jim Jordan, whittling, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy's, Israel, Vern Buchanan, Republican Steve Scalise, Chip Roy, Erik Erickson, Andy Ogles, McCarthy, TRUMP, Donald Trump, John Boehner, Paul Ryan, Republican Tom Emmer, Kevin Hern, Byron Donalds, Patrick McHenry, David Morgan, Makini Brice, Moira Warburton, Susan Heavey, Katharine Jackson, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Deepa Babington, Grant McCool, Nick Zieminski Organizations: U.S . House, Republican Conference, Republican, Republicans, WSB Radio, Caucus, Thomson Locations: WASHINGTON, Ukraine, Jordan, States
Jordan is due to address House Republicans behind closed doors at 6:30 pm EST (2230 GMT) on Monday, before a possible floor vote for speaker at noon EST (1600 GMT) on Tuesday. NARROW MARGINJordan needs 217 Republican votes to be elected speaker on the floor over Democratic opposition, meaning that he can afford to lose no more than four party votes from a slim 221-212 House Republican majority. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise was forced to withdraw from the speaker's race a day after being chosen as the party's first nominee, due to opposition from Jordan supporters. Others worry that the speaker's contest shows House Republicans to be at the mercy of an insidious strain of dysfunction. 3 House Republican Tom Emmer, conservative Representatives Kevin Hern and Byron Donalds as well as acting Speaker Patrick McHenry, who is presiding over the speaker election.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Republican Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy's, Israel, Jordan, Mike Rogers, McCarthy, Hakeem Jeffries, NBC's, Mike Turner, Republican Steve Scalise, Vern Buchanan, Jordan's, We've, Dan Crenshaw, TRUMP, Donald Trump, It's, Jesus couldn't, Kevin, Thomas Massie, John Boehner, Paul Ryan, Republican Tom Emmer, Kevin Hern, Byron Donalds, Patrick McHenry, David Morgan, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Deepa Babington, Grant McCool Organizations: U.S . House, Republican Conference, Republican, Republicans, Democratic, CBS, Ohio Republican, CNN, Trump, Caucus, Thomson Locations: WASHINGTON, Ukraine, Washington, Ohio, Jordan
House Republicans are expected to meet behind closed doors on Monday and plan a floor vote for speaker at noon EST (1600 GMT) on Tuesday. "I would prefer there to be a Republican solution," Representative Mike Turner, who backs Jordan, told CBS' "Face the Nation." NARROW MARGINJordan needs 217 Republican votes to be elected speaker on the floor over Democratic opposition, meaning that he can afford to lose no more than four party votes from a slim 221-212 House Republican majority. Others worry that the speaker's contest shows House Republicans to be at the mercy of an insidious strain of dysfunction. 3 House Republican Tom Emmer, conservative Representatives Kevin Hern and Byron Donalds as well as acting Speaker Patrick McHenry, who is presiding over the speaker election.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Republican Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy's, Jordan, McCarthy, Hakeem Jeffries, NBC's, Mike Turner, Turner, Republican Steve Scalise, Vern Buchanan, Jordan's, We've, Dan Crenshaw, TRUMP, Donald Trump, It's, Jesus couldn't, Kevin, Thomas Massie, John Boehner, Paul Ryan, Republican Tom Emmer, Kevin Hern, Byron Donalds, Patrick McHenry, David Morgan, Scott Malone, Deepa Babington Organizations: U.S . House, Republican Conference, Republican, Republicans, Democratic, CBS, Ohio Republican, CNN, Texas Republican, Trump, Caucus, Thomson Locations: WASHINGTON, Israel, Ukraine, Washington, Ohio, Jordan
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