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The spending showdown that has brought the government to the brink of a partial shutdown this week is being fueled by Republicans in Congress, who, after failing in their efforts to slash federal funding, are still insisting on right-wing policy dictates. House Republicans loaded up their spending bills with hundreds of partisan policy mandates, a vast majority of which had no chance of passing the Democratic-controlled Senate or being signed by President Biden. Republicans also are still seeking to cut federal programs aimed at providing nutrition assistance for low-income families as well as for women and infants. Complicating the picture for Speaker Mike Johnson, who met at the White House on Tuesday with President Biden and the other top congressional leaders, Republicans themselves have been divided over what to push for in spending talks. Ultraconservative lawmakers who rarely support spending legislation have been the loudest voices in favor of cuts and hard-line policy provisions, but more mainstream and politically endangered Republicans have refused to back them.
Persons: Biden, Mike Johnson Organizations: Republicans, Democratic, of Veterans Affairs, White
House Republican hardliners' efforts to stonewall a budget deal ahead of a looming government shutdown could risk triggering automatic spending cuts later this spring that may put pressure on the U.S. economy's already fraught recovery. A full-year budget deal to avert the FRA cuts appears increasingly unlikely, amid staunch opposition from the House's ultraconservative wing. Freedom Caucus derailmentMembers of the House Freedom Caucus, a coalition of hardline conservatives, have been working to derail a permanent budget. Instead, they want to extend the current temporary spending resolution through the rest of the fiscal year, ensuring the FRA's spending cuts are triggered on April 30. But if the FRA's automatic spending cuts take effect, they could rattle the broader economy's teetering recovery.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Jake Sullivan, economy's, Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer, Mitch McConnell, Hakeem Jeffries, Jan, Johnson, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, McConnell, Piper Sandler, Nancy Lazar, Lazar, Sen, Patty Murray Organizations: National Security, U.S, Capitol, House Republican, Congressional Research Service, Caucus, Democrat, Freedom Caucus, Congressional Locations: Washington ,, stonewall, D
This week in The Texas Monthly, I read a troubling profile of Tim Dunn, a 68-year-old billionaire Texas oilman and lavish financier for right-wing extremists in the state. I highly recommend reading the entire profile, which is a comprehensive look at a very powerful man. Dunn makes an unfavorable comparison between human societies and bee hives:“When everybody does what they do best for the hive, it prospers,” he said. If you’re a scout, be a scout.” Dunn then contrasted the cooperation of the hive with the inexorable tumult of modern politics. But when read with Dunn in mind — a straightforward Christian nationalist whose allies in Texas politics are leading the charge to ban books, suppress the rights of L.G.B.T.Q.
Persons: Tim Dunn, Texas oilman, ” Russell Gold, “ Dunn, don’t, Dunn, , ” Dunn, Organizations: Texas, Texans Locations: , Texas, L.G.B.T.Q
According to a list of store rules seen by CNBC, the venue is only accessible to non-Muslim diplomats, and authorization must be validated through an app called Diplo. Saudi Arabia has opened its first alcohol store in the diplomatic quarter of its capital Riyadh, two sources told CNBC. "It's a baby step to opening up alcohol sales to non-Muslims in Saudi Arabia eventually, to hotels and other venues," said the consultant, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the topic. Foreign embassy staff, who are able to import alcohol to be kept on embassy premises, are known in Saudi Arabia to often import booze in large quantities and then sell it on the black market. Saudi Arabia has undergone seismic change both socially and economically in the years since the young Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, now the kingdom's de-facto ruler, came to power.
Persons: we've, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Organizations: CNBC, Foreign, Saudi, Crown Locations: Saudi, Saudi Arabia, Riyadh, Western
JERUSALEM (AP) — A liquor store has opened in Saudi Arabia for the first time in over 70 years, a diplomat reported Wednesday, a further socially liberalizing step in the once-ultraconservative kingdom that is home to the holiest sites in Islam. The store sits next to a supermarket in Riyadh's Diplomatic Quarter, said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a socially sensitive topic in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia remains one of the few nations in the world with a ban on alcohol, alongside its neighbor Kuwait and Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia has banned alcohol since the early 1950s. As Saudi Arabia prepares for a $500 billion futuristic city project called Neom, reports have circulated that alcohol could be served at a beach resort there.
Persons: Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Jamal Khashoggi, King Abdulaziz, Prince Mishari, Cyril Ousman Organizations: JERUSALEM, Washington Post, Workers, Saudi, Arab News, Saudi Research, Media, U.S . State Department, United Locations: Saudi Arabia, Islam, Riyadh, Saudi, haram, Islam . Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, Jeddah, Mecca, Neom
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A former North Dakota lawmaker is running for the state's only seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Republican Rick Becker, a plastic surgeon in Bismarck, announced his campaign on Monday. Republican U.S. Rep. Kelly Armstrong, an attorney and former state senator, said earlier this month that he is running for reelection to the seat he first won in 2018. “It's not so much a matter that I'm interested in tearing him down, it's simply I present an option for voters," Becker said. Becker also is leading a proposed 2024 ballot initiative to eliminate local property taxes.
Persons: , Rick Becker, Republican Sen, John Hoeven, Katrina Christiansen, Kelly Armstrong, Trygve Hammer, Becker, Armstrong, “ It's, it's Organizations: N.D, North, U.S . House, Representatives, Senate, Republican, Republican U.S . Rep, Bastiat Caucus, Trump Locations: BISMARCK, North Dakota, U.S, Bismarck
The House Speaker Is Safe (for Now)
  + stars: | 2024-01-19 | by ( Carl Hulse | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Speaker Mike Johnson yesterday did exactly what got his predecessor fired last year: He pushed through legislation to keep the government open with mainly Democratic votes. Ultraconservative House members were sputtering mad that Johnson, the novice speaker, didn’t drive a harder bargain with Senate Democrats on a short-term funding bill to prevent a shutdown this weekend. But they aren’t yet ready to depose him as they did with Speaker Kevin McCarthy in October. So they felt better about swallowing a spending agreement that seemed inevitable anyway — since it had to be negotiated with Senate Democrats and the White House. Because of the resistance from the hard right, Johnson faced a choice.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson, Ultraconservative, Kevin McCarthy, They’re, McCarthy Organizations: Democratic, Democrats, Senate Democrats, White
Liz Cheney in her new book said some in the Freedom Caucus frowned on a personal June 2020 tweet. Cheney in the tweet featured her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, wearing a mask. Mask-wearing became a polarizing subject among conservatives even during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . But as former Rep. Liz Cheney writes in her new book, "Oath and Honor," some members of the ultraconservative Freedom Caucus were upset when she tweeted out a photo of her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, wearing a mask.
Persons: Liz Cheney, Cheney, Dick Cheney, , qNNqcXzX62, hiUzrhytzs —, Donald Trump, Kevin McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Trump Organizations: Service, House Republican, hiUzrhytzs — CNN, Freedom Caucus, GOP Locations: Wyoming, United States
WASHINGTON, Nov 13 (Reuters) - U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson's plan to avoid a partial government shutdown secured tentative support from top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer on Monday, even as some of Johnson's hardline Republican colleagues pushed back against it. Without changes, the Texas Republican said he would oppose efforts to bring the bill to the floor. The bill is intended to pressure the House and Senate to agree on spending bills for fiscal 2024 by the assigned dates. Johnson warned Democrats that House Republicans would impose a full-year CR for 2024 "with appropriate adjustments to meet our national security priorities" if Congress fails to reach agreement on full-year spending. Failure to hit that benchmark led to McCarthy's ouster, but some House Republicans suggested Johnson deserved more time.
Persons: Mike Johnson's, Chuck Schumer, Schumer, Chip Roy, Roy, Hakeem Jeffries, Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, Johnson's, centrists, Mike Johnson, Elizabeth Frantz, Johnson, Good, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Warren Davidson, Scott Perry, Andrew Clyde, Republican George Santos, Perry, Karine Jean, Pierre, Biden, McCarthy, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Steve Holland, Scott Malone, Andrea Ricci, Richard Chang Organizations: . House, Senate, Texas Republican, Republican, Democratic, U.S . House, U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Food and Drug Administration, House, White, Caucus, White House, Republicans, Social Security, Total U.S, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S
The bill is intended to pressure the House and Senate to agree on spending bills for fiscal 2024 by the assigned dates. Johnson warned Democrats that House Republicans would impose a full-year CR for 2024 "with appropriate adjustments to meet our national security priorities" if Congress fails to reach agreement on full-year spending. Democrats had worried that Republicans would put defense and other party priorities in the first tranche and then let the remaining programs shut down. Failure to hit that benchmark led to McCarthy's ouster, but some House Republicans suggested Johnson deserved more time. The brutal infighting among Republicans this year, including the party's own rejection of three seasoned nominees for House speaker, coincides with falling federal revenues and mounting costs for interest, health and pension outlays.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Elizabeth Frantz, Johnson, Bob Good, Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, Johnson's, centrists, Good, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Warren Davidson, Scott Perry, Andrew Clyde, Chip Roy, Republican George Santos, Perry, Chris Murphy, Biden, McCarthy, David Morgan, Scott Malone, Andrea Ricci, Richard Chang Organizations: U.S . House, U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, . House, Republican, Democratic, Senate, Food and Drug Administration, House, White, Caucus, White House, NBC, Republicans, Social Security, Total U.S, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Washington, Louisiana
AdvertisementAdvertisementArgentina is getting ready to choose its next president — and the country's economy is a mess. Triple-digit inflationSoaring prices are perhaps the best-known problem plaguing Argentina's economy, but far from the only issue that policymakers are battling. The currency is managed by Argentina's central bank. If, or more likely when, Argentina's economy slips into another recession, it'll be the sixth such occurrence in the past decade. His proposed policies include abolishing Argentina's central bank altogether and adopting the dollar, which economists have warned could end up pushing the country even closer to a default.
Persons: , Sergio Massa, Javier Milei, Manuel Cortina, Lucila Bonilla, Bonilla, they've, Kimberley Sperrfechter, There's, there's, Massa, Cristina Sille, Donald Trump, Bolsonaro, they'll, Sperrfechter Organizations: Service, Union, Homeland, Triple, Consumer, National Institute of Statistics, Argentinian, Oxford Economics, The Central Bank of, International Monetary Fund, Reuters, World Bank, FX, Central Bank of, Peronist Locations: Argentina, American, Buenos Aires, Central Bank of Argentina
Speaker Mike Johnson on Saturday pitched House Republicans on a convoluted plan to avert a government shutdown at the end of next week, proposing a bill that would temporarily extend funding for some federal agencies until late January and for others through early February. The measure faces an uncertain fate in Congress. Many conservative House Republicans have demanded that any spending plan include deep spending cuts, and Democrats and some G.O.P. senators have sharply questioned the idea of bifurcating federal programs and staggering the deadlines for funding them. Some members of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus have endorsed the two-step idea in recent days.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson Organizations: Saturday, Republicans, House Republicans
Lawmakers said they expect the Louisiana Republican to unveil a continuing resolution or "CR" to avert a partial government shutdown as late as Saturday. Johnson can afford to lose no more than four Republican votes from his slim 221-212 House majority on legislation opposed by Democrats. But he is under pressure from Republican hardliners to lumber any CR with spending cuts and policy riders Democrats uniformly reject. "If there's any kind of CR, there has to be spending reductions," Representative Chip Roy, a prominent conservative, told reporters. House Republicans are trying to pass a full slate of 12 appropriations bills for fiscal 2024, which began on Oct. 1.
Persons: Julia Nikhinson, Mike Johnson, Joe Biden, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Johnson, Chip Roy, Tom Cole, Cole, We've, Steve Womack, Republican centrists, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, It's, Ralph Norman, David Morgan, Nandita Bose, Susan Heavey, Scott Malone, David Gregorio, Mark Porter Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Congress, REUTERS, Rights, . House, White, Treasury, Lawmakers, Louisiana Republican, Democratic, Republican, House Republicans, Internal Revenue Service, District of, Food and Drug Administration, Amtrak, Biden, Republicans, Caucus, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Louisiana, Washington, District of Columbia
The Senate, which Democrats control 51-49, has also been struggling to pass bills funding the government through Sept. 30, adding to calls for a stopgap "continuing resolution" to avert a shutdown. Further complicating matters is a Republican majority so narrow that House Speaker Mike Johnson can afford to lose no more than four party votes on legislation Democrats oppose. "He hasn't decided how that would be structured - if that would happen," House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, the No. 2 Republican, told reporters in the U.S. Capitol on Friday. The House passed two of three Republican spending bills on their agenda last week, covering congressional operations and the environment.
Persons: Leah Millis, We've, Tom Cole, Hakeem Jeffries, Jeffries, Mike Johnson, Jeff Lewis, Johnson, Kevin McCarthy, hasn't, Steve Scalise, Frank Lucas, Jason Lange, David Morgan, Richard Cowan, Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: U.S . Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, U.S, Congress, Republicans, Democratic, House Democratic, Republican, Caucus, University of California, Capitol, Fox News Sunday, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Los Angeles
REUTERS/Kevin Wurm/File Photo/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Nov 6 (Reuters) - The current U.S. Congress is on track to be the most polarized ever, according to a running analysis at voteview.com, a tool widely used by political scientists that sorts lawmakers based on how their voting records overlap with their peers. The complicated math behind the analysis transforms a lawmaker's entire voting record into one number, with negative numbers for liberals and positive readings for conservatives. The most liberal have the least in common with the most conservative, while moderates from each party have more overlap and are given scores in between. * Currently, the gap in the House sits at 0.90, beating the 0.89 gaps for lawmakers elected in 2016 and 2018. The current 0.88 gap in the U.S. Senate is also at a record high for that chamber.
Persons: Kevin Wurm, Ralph Norman, Pramila Jayapal, Joe Manchin, Jason Lange, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, Caucus, Democrat, Congressional Progressive Caucus, Republican Party, Republicans, U.S . Senate, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S
Well, when a landlord doesn't lower the rent to get a new retail tenant, it's because that landlord can't. They're free to renegotiate or refinance the terms of mortgages, given the extraordinary downturn facing retail storefronts. And the future will be full of even higher vacancy rates, higher interest rates, and lower rents. Retail rents have flattened, she says, but the construction of retail space has not. Still, from an urban-planning standpoint, the way we finance retail space makes no sense.
Persons: You've, apocalypses, that's, It's, David Greensfelder, Greensfelder, Banks, what's, , Larisa Ortiz, Ortiz, Justin Sullivan, Lorenzo Perez, I've, Rachel Meltzer, Kazuko Morgan, Perez, Culdesac, Something's, Meltzer, Adam Rogers Organizations: McKinsey & Company, Verizon, Republics, Harvard Locations: America, Urban, Manhattan, San Francisco, Market, vaya, What's, Phoenix, That's, LA, New York, Wakefield, Tempe , Arizona
Republican Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana was elected speaker of the House of Representatives on Wednesday, ending a three-week leadership crisis that has paralyzed Congress. Vice chairman of the House Republican conference and a hard-right conservative, Johnson had maintained a low public profile until he was thrust into the spotlight this week after securing the party's nomination for speaker. Johnson voted against legislation in September that has kept the government running through November, and he has opposed assistance for Ukraine in the past. The Louisiana Republican said earlier this month that the House needs to take all necessary action to help Israel destroy Hamas. Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that Johnson did legal work for the Alliance Defending Freedom.
Persons: Mike Johnson of, Johnson, Johnson —, Hakeem Jeffries, , Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan of, Tom Emmer, Johnson's, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Israel, Biden's Organizations: House Republican, GOP, Israel, Republicans, New York Republicans, Ukraine, Louisiana Republican, Alliance Defending Locations: Mike Johnson of Louisiana, Israel, D, Louisiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio, Minnesota, America, Ukraine, Georgia , Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin
Rep. Mike Johnson, an ultraconservative and Trump loyalist, was voted in as the new speaker of the House. The Representative from Louisiana was the fourth nominee for the speakership after Rep. Kevin McCarthy was pushed out by far-right Republicans in an unprecedented ouster on October 3, 2023.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Kevin McCarthy Organizations: Trump, Republicans Locations: Louisiana
Representative Mike Johnson, the little-known Louisiana Republican who was elected speaker on Wednesday, is both a leading election denier and one of the staunchest religious conservatives in the House. Mr. Johnson, a lawyer and former chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, played a pivotal role in congressional efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Last year, Mr. Johnson introduced a bill that prohibited the use of federal funds for providing sex education to children under 10 that included any L.G.B.T.Q. topics — a proposal that critics called a national version of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law. Mr. Johnson called the legislation “common sense.”
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson, Susan B, Anthony Pro, Roe, Wade, Jim Jordan of Organizations: Louisiana Republican, Republican, Caucus Locations: Louisiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio
3 House Republican, dropped his bid only hours after securing the nomination. A social conservative, Mr. Johnson is a lawyer and the former chairman of the Republican Study Committee. This conference that you see, this House Republican majority, is united. Some on the right opposed to Mr. Emmer cited his vote in favor of codifying federal protections for same-sex couples. Mr. Emmer had attempted to mollify Mr. Trump by calling him over the weekend and praising him, according to the former president.
Persons: Tom Emmer, Mike Johnson, Emmer’s, Donald J, Trump, Johnson, Kevin McCarthy, Mr, rouser, Trump’s, , , Virginia Foxx, Mike Johnson of, We’re, Haiyun Jiang, McCarthy, Steve Womack, I’m, ” Mr, holdouts, Emmer, MAGA, Byron Donalds of, Hakeem Jeffries, Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan, Biden, that’s, Robert Jimison Organizations: Republicans, Republican, Committee, Education, Minnesota, Credit, The New York Times, Mr, “ Republican, Trump, Caucus, Freedom Caucus, Republican Party, America First Voters Locations: Louisiana, Minnesota, North Carolina, Mike Johnson of Louisiana, Ukraine, Arkansas, American, Byron Donalds of Florida, New York, Ohio
“RINO Tom Emmer, who I do not know well, is not one of them. He never respected the Power of a Trump Endorsement, or the breadth and scope of MAGA—MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”A majority of those opposed to Mr. Emmer were members of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus and loyal to Mr. Trump. Any candidate for speaker can lose only a handful of votes and still win the speakership because Republicans hold such a small majority in the House. Only hours later, Mr. Emmer decided to drop his bid, according to a person familiar with his thinking who divulged it on the condition of anonymity before it was officially announced. The Republican disarray underscored a new ethos that has gripped the House G.O.P.
Persons: Emmer’s, holdouts, Emmer, , ” Mr, Trump, , Tom Emmer, MAGA Organizations: Republicans, “ Republican, Trump, Caucus
Up until a few weeks ago, no member of the House Freedom Caucus had ever gotten close to becoming House speaker. After Mr. Scalise withdrew, Mr. Jordan won 124 votes in the Republican House conference vote against Austin Scott, enough to earn his party’s nomination for speaker. In the public vote on the House floor, Mr. Jordan won 200 votes on the first ballot for speaker. That’s less than 40 percent of House Republicans. None of these votes offer a perfect measure of House Republicans.
Persons: Jim Jordan’s, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy’s, Steve Scalise, Scalise, Austin Scott, Organizations: Caucus, Republicans, Mr, Republican, House Republican
Interim House Speaker Patrick McHenry of North Carolina said he wants the nominee to face a House vote as soon as Tuesday. His failure came after the party's original nominee, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana, bowed out of the race because he could not secure enough GOP votes. Meuser said Monday whoever wins the nomination needs to ensure that speaker's office is inclusive so the narrow GOP majority remains unified. The Pennsylvania Republican told Fox Business that Republicans' failure to elect a speaker has made the party "part of the dysfunction of Washington." US House Of Representatives | via ReutersRep. Gary Palmer is chairman of the House Republicans' policy committee.
Persons: Tom Emmer, Amanda Andrade, Jim Jordan's, Joe Biden, Patrick McHenry of, Jordan, Steve Scalise, Scalise, Hakeem Jeffries, Austin Scott of, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump's, Nathan Howard, Kevin McCarthy of California, McCarthy, Emmer, Austin Scott, Jim Jordan, Kevin Lamarque, Scott, Austin, he's, Jack Bergman, Bergman, Byron Donalds, Donalds, Jon Cherry, Kevin Hern, Evelyn Hockstein, Kevin Hern of, Hern, Mike Johnson, Patrick Semansky, Johnson, Dan Meuser, Alexander Drago, Meuser, Gary Palmer of, Gary Palmer, Palmer, Pete Sessions, Texas Eric Thayer Organizations: Sports, Capitol, Rhoades, Reuters, Ohio Rep, House Republicans, GOP, Interim, Republicans, Democrats, Republican, Minnesota U.S, Getty, NBC News, Minnesota Republican, Austin Scott of Georgia U.S . Rep, U.S . House, Representatives, Reuters Rep, Ohio Republican, Georgia Republican, Michigan Rep, Marine Corps, Washington, Michigan Republican, Florida U.S . Rep, U.S, Caucus, Florida Republican, Oklahoma Rep, Fox News, Oklahoma Republican, Louisiana Rep, House Republican Conference, AP, Louisiana Republican, Marriott, Navy, Pennsylvania Republican, Fox Business, Gary Palmer of Alabama Republican U.S . Rep, Alabama Republican, Pete Sessions of Texas Rep, Bloomberg Locations: Washington, Israel, Ukraine, Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, Louisiana, lockstep, New York, Minnesota, Austin Scott of Georgia, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Washington , DC, Florida, Kevin Hern of Oklahoma, America, Gary Palmer of Alabama, Texas
First, House Republicans chose an establishment guy to be their speaker. Then they tried an ultraconservative candidate, but mainstream members struck back, quickly killing his candidacy. Back at square one after 20 days without a speaker, many House Republicans have found themselves asking: Are we simply too dysfunctional to govern? With a free-for-all raging in their ranks, House Republicans were huddling behind closed doors on Monday evening to hear from no fewer than eight contenders campaigning to be the party’s latest nominee for speaker. But the tangle of crosscurrents dividing them means that there is no guarantee that the victor can actually win the post on the House floor.
Organizations: House Republicans, Republicans
PinnedRepresentative Jim Jordan of Ohio failed for a third time on Friday morning to win election as House speaker, leaving his party with no consensus on a way forward and the chamber paralyzed in the face of growing pressure to get back to business. Three Republicans from swing districts won by President Biden — Representative Marc Molinaro of New York, Representative Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Representative Tom Kean of New Jersey — abandoned Mr. Jordan after supporting him earlier. There is no consensus among Republicans about an alternative candidate to Mr. Jordan, who has yet to show any inclination to drop out of the race. The House has been in a state of chaos for 18 days after hard-right rebels ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Mr. Jordan then received his party’s nomination to be speaker, but he failed to win the post in votes by the full House on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Persons: Jim Jordan of, Jordan, Biden, Marc Molinaro, Brian Fitzpatrick, Tom Kean of, Tom Kean of New Jersey —, Patrick T, McHenry, Kevin McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Organizations: Tom Kean of New, Republicans, Republican, Capitol, Caucus, Committee Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, New York, Tom Kean of New Jersey, McHenry of North Carolina, Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, Mexico, Louisiana
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