Rep. Jim Jordan failed a second attempt at being elected speaker on Wednesday after 22 Republicans voted against him.
It has been more than two weeks since the ouster of the previous speaker, Rep. Kevin McCarthy.
Photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/ShutterstockWASHINGTON—Republican speaker nominee Rep. Jim Jordan was set to fall short in a third round of voting to secure the gavel Friday morning, after struggling to win support from colleagues who have opposed his candidacy, likely leaving Republicans at a fresh impasse.
While the Ohio conservative has campaigned as a speaker who can unite the party, he continues to face long odds, a full week after securing the GOP nomination and more than two weeks after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) was ousted.
Republicans have no current fallback plan after rejecting a proposal to vote on giving more powers to Speaker Pro Tempore Patrick McHenry (R., N.C.).
Persons:
Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Jim Lo Scalzo, Pro Tempore Patrick McHenry
Organizations:
WASHINGTON, Republicans, GOP, Pro Tempore
Locations:
Ohio, Calif, N.C