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A GOP representative compared Palestinian civilians to Nazis in a speech on the House floor. More than 8,000 Palestinian civilians have been reported killed in less than a month by the Israeli military. AdvertisementAdvertisementSpeaking on the House floor on Wednesday, a Republican congressman compared Palestinian civilians to Nazis. Mast equated Palestinian civilians to civilians of World War II-era Nazi Germany weeks after Hamas terrorists launched a large-scale coordinated attack against Israel, leading to more than 1,400 Israeli civilian deaths. "I think when we look at this as a whole, I would encourage the other side to not so lightly throw around the idea of innocent Palestinian civilians," Mast said.
Persons: , Brian Mast, Florida who's, Mast, Rashida, Marjorie Taylor Greene's, censuring Tlaib, Greene, Chip Roy, Colonel Sanders, Lauren Boebert, Ken Buck, Mike Johnson Organizations: GOP, Service, Republican, Rep, US Army, Israeli Defense Force, Capitol, Republicans, Democratic, Reps, Biden Administration Locations: Florida, Nazi Germany, Israel, Gaza, Afghanistan, of Israel, Palestine
Greene is angry that Rep. Chip Roy of Texas opposed her effort to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib. Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) November 1, 2023Twenty-three Republicans, including Roy, voted against the resolution moving forward. Her conduct is unbecoming of a member of Congress and certainly worthy of condemnation - if not censure," Roy said in a statement after his vote. "However, tonight's feckless resolution to censure Tlaib was deeply flawed and made legally and factually unverified claims, including the claim of leading an 'insurrection'." Talib said Greene's resolution was "deeply Islamophobic" and made clear she would not change her approach.
Persons: Marjorie Taylor Greene, Greene, Chip Roy, Texas, Rashida Tlaib, Roy, Colonel Sanders, , Republican Sen, Ted Cruz's, Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 ( Organizations: Republican, Unity Party, Service, Democratic, Republicans, Congress, Locations: Georgia, Texas, California
Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., talks with reporters before a procedural vote on the debt limit bill in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, May 31, 2023. Republican Rep. Ken Buck of Colorado on Wednesday announced he will not seek reelection next year, saying he was "disappointed" in his party, and disillusioned by political gridlock in Congress. Buck's announcement came just hours after another veteran House Republican, Rep. Kay Granger of Texas, the powerful chair of the House Appropriations Committee, confirmed she would not seek reelection next year either. Buck, 64, said he was leaving Congress in large part because he was frustrated with the direction he saw the Republican Party moving in. "Too many Republican leaders are lying to America," he said in a video announcing his retirement.
Persons: Ken Buck, Ken Buck of Colorado, gridlock, Kay Granger, Granger Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Republican, Wednesday, Republicans, Republican Party Locations: Ken Buck of, Congress, Kay Granger of Texas, Fort Worth, Buck, America
In the end, the only man who could unify House Republicans behind him was a relatively little-known and mild-mannered evangelical Christian from Louisiana. AdvertisementAdvertisementAs the speaker saga wore on, it provoked questions among some House Republicans: How could it be that they had failed to elect a speaker for so long? While Gaetz maintains otherwise, his angry GOP colleagues have plenty of evidence to make their case that it was an attention ploy. Rep. Matt Gaetz surrounded by reporters and cameras after the House voted to oust Kevin McCarthy from the speakership. The attention economy doesn't preclude an ability to govern — an effective politician might seek to harness their celebrity towards worthy ends.
Persons: Mike Johnson's, Matt Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy, Garrett Graves, Sen, Thom Tillis, Madison Cawthorn, Tillis, Drew Angerer, Greg Murphy of, Nancy Mace, McCarthy, Mace, I'm, Win McNamee, Josh Hawley, Ronald Reagan, Donald Trump's, Nicole Wallace, Obama, JD Vance, Ohio, Vance, Ted Cruz, Jose Luis Magana, denialism, Jim Jordan, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Brett Kavanaugh, Jen Psaki, Symone Sanders, it's, Rep, Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Kelly Armstrong, Adam Schiff, Chip Somodevilla, Bob Good, Virginia, Gaetz, , Ken Buck, Colorado, Hawley deadpanned, Mike Lawler, I've, Cruz, Buck, Joe Biden, Liz Cheney Organizations: Republicans, GOP, North Carolina Republican, Getty, Twitter, South Carolina, Republican, Rep, Fox News, Republican Party, Conservative Political, Conference, AP, Cannon, South, Democratic, Supreme, Biden, MSNBC, Democrats, Capitol, New York Post, Colorado Locations: Louisiana, Florida, Greg Murphy of North Carolina, Missouri, Hollywood, California, South Carolina, Alexandria, Cortez of New York, Ukraine, New York, Ted Cruz of Texas
Another unknown factor is how House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan – who spent much of the last three weeks running for speaker – will return to the scene. A source familiar with Johnson’s thinking told CNN, “He believes it’s a fact-finding mission. GOP Rep. Jen Kiggans, who represents a Virginia district Biden won in 2020, told CNN, “We have so much work we need to get done including these appropriations bills. I don’t think so,” GOP Rep. Mike Garcia, who represents a competitive district in California, told CNN of the inquiry. House Republicans have not held an impeachment inquiry hearing since their first one on September 28, where expert witnesses brought in by Republicans acknowledged they did not yet have the evidence to prove the accusations leveled against the president.
Persons: Joe Biden, Hunter, James Biden, Mike Johnson, Kevin McCarthy, Johnson, , Jason Smith, Jim Jordan –, , Jordan, Russell Dye, James Comer, Fox News ’ Sean Hannity, ” Johnson, , it’s, Comer, Smith, Jeff Van Drew, Jen Kiggans, Biden, Mike Garcia, Ralph Norman, Jim Jordan, Austin Scott of, ” Van Drew, Matt Gaetz, Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski, McCarthy, Ken Buck, Ken Buck of Colorado, ” Buck, Chip Roy, “ we’re, Martin Estrada, David Weiss, holdouts, Ben Cline, Virginia, ” Gaetz Organizations: CNN, Republican, Republicans, GOP, Kentucky Republican, Judiciary, Fox News, New, New Jersey Republican, ” CNN, White, Democratic, California, Department of Justice Locations: Missouri, Kentucky, Jordan, New Jersey, Virginia, California, South Carolina, Austin Scott of Georgia, Florida, Ken Buck of, , Texas
“This House Republican majority is united,” Rep. Mike Johnson said Tuesday night after becoming the conference’s fourth speaker nominee – and the second nominee in the course of a single day. Johnson, who was elected in 2016 and serves as the vice chairman of the House GOP conference, made a pitch over the weekend as a “consensus candidate” for speaker. If he can get to 217, a heavy lift in a slim Republican majority of only 221 lawmakers, Johnson will become the most inexperienced speaker in recent memory. And a government funding fight that got House Republicans into the speaker mess is slated to again rear its head with a Nov. 17 deadline to pass spending bills or kick the can down the road. 2, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, a fellow Louisianan who was himself denied the speakership just weeks ago.
Persons: Mike Johnson, , Johnson, Tom Emmer, Emmer, Mike, he’ll, Ken Buck, we’ve, he’s, Jim Jordan, Donald Trump’s, ” didn’t, , , hasn’t, Jordan, He’s, Joe Biden, He’ll, Steve Scalise Organizations: Republican, , GOP, Louisiana Republican, CNN, Republicans, Israel Locations: Colorado, legislating, Ukraine, Gaza
The failed full-court press to install Republican Rep. Jim Jordan as House Speaker revealed ugly examples of how violent threats are becoming normalized inside Trump’s GOP. According to Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas, the strategy behind the threats is to “Attack, attack, attack. In the run-up to that attack, members of the Proud Boys even bragged that they could dress up as Antifa. In the next breath, however, he says that the war in Israel creates moral urgency to push through a Jim Jordan speakership. Any sense that this was a random unhinged person without a partisan political agenda was demolished by his demand that the congressman vote for “Jim Jordan or more conservative.” This caller has explicit right-wing ideological demands.
Persons: John Avlon, , Jim Jordan, Mariannette Miller, Meeks, Jordan, Ken Buck, Colorado, he’d, Steve Womack, “ It’s, , Jake Tapper’s, ” It’s, bender, That’s, Jim Jordan speakership, doesn’t, , Trump, Trump’s, Liz Cheney, Scott Perry, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Jake Sherman, Rep, Warren Davidson, Donald Trump’s, Utah Sen, Mitt Romney, Jordan couldn’t Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, , NBC, Republicans, Capitol, Trump, Rep, Punchbowl News, Ohio, Republican Party, Utah Locations: “ Lincoln, Iowa, Arkansas, Israel, Scott Perry of
Rep. Ken Buck was opposed to Rep. Jim Jordan's now-unsuccessful bid for the House speakership. Buck received heavy backlash for his stance, and his district offices were flooded with calls. The GOP congressman told NBC News he received an eviction notice for one of his offices over his position. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. I have a notice of an eviction because the landlord is mad with my voting record on the speaker issue."
Persons: Ken Buck, Jim Jordan's, Buck, , wouldn't, Kevin McCarthy of, Jordan, Kristen Welker, I've, Martin Lind, Lind —, Donald Trump, Sen, Cory Gardner, Herschel Walker, Lind, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump didn't Organizations: GOP, NBC News, Service, Colorado Republican, NBC, Pelican, Colorado, Colorado Sun Locations: Weld County, Kevin McCarthy of California, Colorado, Windsor , Colorado, Cory Gardner of Colorado, Georgia, Castle Rock , Colorado
7 of the Republicans who voted to oust McCarthy are essentially offering themselves up as sacrifices. AdvertisementAdvertisementAs Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio continues to hemorrhage support in his quest for the speaker's gavel, a group of Republicans are essentially offering themselves as human sacrifices. Earlier on Friday, 25 Republicans voted against the Ohio Republican, giving him the lowest percentage of votes for the majority party's nominee for speaker since 1859 — before the Civil War. Last night, Republican Rep. Greg Murphy of North Carolina apparently blocked Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina — one of the eight — on Twitter after he said she should apologize for "causing this mess." House Republicans are set to vote behind closed doors at 1 pm on whether Jordan should remain the party's nominee.
Persons: Jim Jordan's, McCarthy, They're, , Jim Jordan of, Figurately, Kevin McCarthy, Ken Buck, Ken Buck of Colorado, Jordan, Matt Gaetz, Greg Murphy of, Nancy Mace Organizations: Republicans, Service, Republican, GOP, Conference, Ohio Republican, South, Twitter Locations: Jim Jordan of Ohio, Ken Buck of, Greg Murphy of North Carolina, South Carolina, Jordan
The House is due to hold a second vote to fill the vacant speaker's chair when it convenes at 11 a.m. It is not clear whether Jordan, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, will fare better in a second vote. At least one Republican who voted against him on Tuesday, Representative Doug LaMalfa, said he would vote for Jordan on the second ballot. "He's the only viable candidate we have," Republican Representative Thomas Massie told reporters. Democrats, meanwhile, are pressing for a bipartisan compromise that could result in more powers for Republican Representative Patrick McHenry, who is acting as temporary speaker.
Persons: Jim Jordan, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Donald Trump, Doug LaMalfa, Ken Buck, Jordan's, Thomas Massie, Patrick McHenry, Hakeem Jeffries, John Boehner, Joe Biden's, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Katharine Jackson, Makini Brice, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Grant McCool Organizations: U.S . House, Republican, Republicans, New Republican, U.S . Rep, U.S, Capitol, Democratic, Caucus, Committee, Biden, White, Thomson Locations: U.S, East, Ukraine, Washington
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
Lacking the 217 votes he needs to claim the speaker's gavel, Jordan postponed further action until 11 a.m. ET (1500 GMT) on Wednesday, while he scrambled to pressure the 20 fellow Republicans who voted against him on Tuesday afternoon. Tuesday's failed vote meant that the House remains leaderless, as it has been since a handful of Republican insurgents engineered McCarthy's removal. Republicans control the House by a narrow 221-212 margin, giving them little room for error on divisive votes like this one. 3 House Republican, and Patrick McHenry, who is temporarily filling the speaker's chair.
Persons: Republican Jim Jordan, Jordan, Kevin McCarthy, Hakeem Jeffries, Tuesday's, Donald Trump, McCarthy, Jim Jordan, Tom Emmer, Mario Diaz, Balart, Ken Buck, Trump, Joe Biden, Patrick McHenry, Jeffries, McHenry, Pete Aguilar, decry, John Boehner, David Morgan, Makini Brice, Moira Warburton, Katharine Jackson, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis, Grant McCool Organizations: Republican, U.S . House, Democratic, Democrats, U.S . Rep, Republicans, New, Scalise, New Republican, Trump, Committee, Biden, Caucus, Ohio State University, Thomson Locations: East, Ukraine, U.S, Washington, New York City, Israel
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
[1/3] Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) speak to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., October 29, 2019. Buck said Jordan and Scalise provided unsatisfactory answers on the question of reining in spending on Tuesday night. Scalise and Jordan have both racked up several dozen endorsements, but neither has a clear path to success. Some moderates, for example, have warned that Jordan becoming speaker would give Democrats plenty of ammunition for next year's congressional elections. "I think Jim Jordan will end up getting it, and if not, Scalise would be fine," said Representative Ralph Norman, who supports Jordan.
Persons: Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan, Erin Scott, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Patrick McHenry, Tom Cole, Scalise, Jordan, Ben Cline, Ken Buck, Buck, Ralph Norman, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Richard Cowan, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Gerry Doyle, Jonathan Oatis, Deepa Babington Organizations: Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, U.S . House, Republicans, Republican, Reuters, Jordan, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Jordan, Israel, Ukraine, Wednesday's, Washington
There are two declared candidates so far in the closed-door, secret-ballot vote: Majority Leader Steve Scalise, who is No. Even before lawmakers start voting on a speaker, they are expected to decide how many votes the nominee will need to win. It took only eight Republicans to oust McCarthy last week, a fact that could make leading the caucus a challenge for any new speaker. At least 217 House Republicans will need to agree on a candidate to avoid a repeat of January's messy speakership battle, when McCarthy needed 15 rounds of voting to win the speaker's gavel. Some moderates, for example, have warned that a Speaker Jordan would give Democrats plenty of ammunition for next year's congressional elections.
Persons: Evelyn Hockstein, Kevin McCarthy, Steve Scalise, Jim Jordan, McCarthy, Patrick McHenry, Scalise, Jordan, Ben Cline, Ken Buck, Buck, Kevin, Hakeem Jeffries, Donald Trump, Ralph Norman, David Morgan, Moira Warburton, Richard Cowan, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Gerry Doyle Organizations: U.S . House, U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, Republicans, Republican, Reuters, Democrats, Jordan, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Israel, Ukraine, Wednesday's, Washington
House Republicans are expected to hear from speaker candidates behind closed doors on Tuesday and vote to choose their nominee on Wednesday. A House floor vote to elect a replacement for Republican former Speaker Kevin McCarthy could come later in the week. "It's not ideal," Republican Representative Michael McCaul told CNN on Sunday. "What kind of message are we sending to our adversaries when we can't govern, when we're dysfunctional, when we don't even have a speaker of the House?" "I am not going to support anybody until the conference figures out spending," Republican Representative Ken Buck told ABC's "This Week" on Sunday.
Persons: Ronen, Jim Jordan, Barack Obama, Kevin McCarthy, Michael McCaul, Jordan, we've, Steve Scalise, Ken Buck, ABC's, Matt Gaetz, McCarthy’s, Joe Biden, Benjamin Netanyahu, Chris Christie, They're, Joey Roulette, David Morgan, Heather Timmons, Lisa Shumaker Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, U.S . House, Republicans, Republican, CNN, Fox News, Sunday, Democrat, Israeli, Israeli Defense Forces, Thomson Locations: Israeli, Gaza, Sderot, Israel, U.S, Louisiana, Florida
For the first time in American history, the Speaker of the House has been voted out of office. GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz initiated the motion to oust fellow Republican Kevin McCarthy from the seat. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementAdvertisementFor the first time in American history the sitting Speaker of the House, California Republican Kevin McCarthy, has been voted out of office — and it took eight members of his own party to turn the tide against him. McCarthy has argued Gaetz's move was payback for Gaetz facing a House Committee inquiry into allegations of sexual misconduct and misuse of funds.
Persons: Matt Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy, Gaetz, , California Republican Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Andy Biggs, Arizona Ken Buck, Colorado Tim Burchett, Tennessee Eli Crane, Arizona Matt Gaetz, Florida Bob Good, Virginia Nancy Mace, Carolina Matt Rosendale, Montana McCarthy, — Biggs, Crane, Gaetz's Organizations: GOP, Service, California Republican, Republican, Republicans, House Democrats Locations: California, Colorado, Tennessee, Arizona, Florida, Carolina, Montana, Rosendale
The House voted to vacate the Office of the Speaker on Tuesday, booting Kevin McCarthy from his job. The House, under interim speaker Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, will now have to hold speaker elections once again, and it's not clear where that will lead. In 1910, House Speaker Joseph Cannon called the motion himself as he faced a mutiny from his own party, daring his own members to oust him. The Saturday measure, while supported by most House Republicans, ultimately passed with more Democratic than Republican votes. Gaetz and dozens of other House Republicans — potentially more than half — oppose sending more aid to the besieged country.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Matt Gaetz's, , Matt Gaetz, McCarthy, Andy Biggs, Ken Buck, Tim Burchett, Eli Crane, Bob Good, Nancy Mace, Matt Rosendale, Republicans —, Patrick McHenry of, there's, What's, Hakeem Jeffries, Angie Craig of, hasn't, Saul Loeb, it's, Joseph Cannon, Newt Gingrich, John Boehner, Gaetz, Joe Biden, could've, McCarthy hasn't, they're, Abigail Spanberger, Spanberger, Jared Golden of, Who's, Tom Emmer, Jodey Arrington, Tom Cole of Oklahoma, Andy Ogles Organizations: Democrats, Service, Republicans, Democrat, Republican, Arizona Rep, Colorado Rep, Tennessee Rep, Florida Rep, Rep, South Carolina Rep, House Republicans, Democratic, Getty, , Florida Republican, Texas Locations: Florida, Montana, Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, California's, Angie Craig of Minnesota, Ukraine, Virginia, Jared Golden of Maine, Minnesota, Tennessee
WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Kevin McCarthy had support from 208 members of his conference to remain as House speaker. A look at the eight Republicans who voted to remove McCarthy from office, against the overwhelming wishes of their colleagues. REP. ANDY BIGGSBiggs is serving his fourth term in the House representing a strongly Republican-leaning district in Arizona. He said the annual spending bills are critical to cutting spending and getting rid of duplicative programs. It had nothing to do about spending," McCarthy said.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Joe Biden, ” McCarthy, “ That's, Reagan, ANDY BIGGS Biggs, Biggs, Donald Trump, , KEN BUCK Buck, Buck, Biden, @SpeakerMcCarthy, Burchett, we've, Kevin, ELI CRANE Crane, Tom O’Halleran, ” Crane, MATT GAETZ Gaetz, Trump, Mike Rogers, Gaetz, Matt Gaetz, ” Gaetz, “ Kevin McCarthy, Denver Riggleman, Good, , NANCY MACE Mace, Mace Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Democrats, REP, Caucus, Republican Party, McCarthy's, TIM, , Navy, Democratic, Republican, Alabama Rep, GOP, Denver, The Citadel, Cadets, U.S Locations: Arizona, Colorado, Denver, He's, Tennessee, Tennessee’s, Florida, South Carolina, Montana, Ukraine, U.S, , Rosendale
Kevin McCarthy Ousted as House Speaker
  + stars: | 2023-10-03 | by ( Kaia Hubbard | Oct. | At P.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +6 min
The House narrowly voted to oust Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday, dooming the House speaker to a fate that seemed almost guaranteed since he took the gavel in January, with a group of rebels in his conference nipping at his heels. “The office of speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby declared vacant,” the clerk announced as the vote concluded. A temporary speaker – Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina – is expected to take over based upon a list of succession that McCarthy submitted in January, according to House rules . But in 2015, McCarthy’s speaker bid abruptly ended amid pushback from right-wing lawmakers who have long seen him as insufficiently conservative. I’m the 55th speaker of the House.”Without McCarthy at the helm, the House is expected to soon vote to elect another speaker.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Patrick McHenry of, Patrick McHenry of North Carolina –, McHenry, , McCarthy’s speakership, Washington ”, , Andy Biggs, Ken Buck, Tom Burchett, Eli Crane, Matt Gaetz, Bob Good, Nancy Mace, Matt Rosendale, Gaetz, motioned, it’s, ” Gaetz, ” McCarthy, ” McCarthy’s, McCarthy’s, Hakeem Jeffries Organizations: United States House, Democrats, Washington, Bakersfield, Republicans – Rep, GOP, Republican, California Republican, Florida Republican, Democratic, House Republican Locations: Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, California,
Republicans just tried to kill Matt Gaetz's motion to vacate, which would kick McCarthy out of his job. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe House just moved one giant step closer to firing the GOP's Kevin McCarthy as speaker of the House. Every House Democrat, along with 11 House Republicans, voted against the effort, ensuring a vote on McCarthy's future will take place shortly. The procedural move tees up a historic showdown: the first House vote to remove a speaker since 1910. Should it succeed, it will be the first time in American history that the House ousts its own speaker.
Persons: Matt Gaetz's, McCarthy, , Kevin McCarthy, Matt Gaetz, Andy Biggs, Ken Buck, Tim Burchett, Eli Crane, Warren Davidson, Bob Good, Nancy Mace, Cory Mills, Matt Rosendale, Victoria Spartz, Hakeem Jeffries, Jeffries, Joe Biden, Donald Trump Organizations: Democrats, Republicans, Service, Republican, Democrat, Arizona Rep, Colorado Rep, Tennessee Rep, Ohio Rep, Florida Rep, Rep, South Carolina Rep, Montana Rep, Victoria Locations: Florida, Montana, Indiana, Ukraine
Notably, Representatives Wesley Hunt of Texas and Ken Buck of Colorado came back to Washington at Mr. McCarthy’s request to vote in his favor for speaker. And Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia aligned herself with Mr. McCarthy during the speaker fight and was ousted from the Freedom Caucus over the summer. With far-right members of his caucus in revolt over suspending the debt ceiling, Mr. McCarthy was forced to negotiate a deal with President Biden, further enraging the already volatile faction. In another blow to Mr. McCarthy, the bipartisan measure passed with more Democrats than Republicans. They did so to punish Mr. McCarthy for making a deal with Mr. Biden to suspend the debt limit.
Persons: Antagonized McCarthy, Biggs Bishop Boebert Buck Burchett, Gosar Greene Hunt Mace Miller Mills Mooney Moore, Kevin McCarthy’s stopgap, McCarthy’s, Biggs, Gosar Miller, Clyde Donalds Good Harris Luna Norman Perry Roy, Wesley Hunt, Ken Buck, Colorado, Marjorie Taylor Greene, McCarthy, Buck Burchett, Hunt Mace Miller Mills Mooney, Alford, Bost Brecheen Buchanan Cammack Carter Cline Clyde Collins DesJarlais Donalds Fallon Finstad Fischbach Fry Fulcher Gonzales Good Gooden Griffith, Hageman Harris Harshbarger Hern Higgins Jackson LaHood Lesko Luna Luttrell Mann Mast McCormick Moran Norman Palmer Perry Posey Rose Roy Santos, Strong Tiffany Timmons Van Drew Van Duyne, Weber, Biden, Greene, Troy Nehls, Lauren Boebert, Rosendale, Norman Roy Scalise, Mr Organizations: Republicans, House Republicans, Caucus, Mr, Freedom Caucus, Hageman Harris Harshbarger Hern Higgins Jackson LaHood Lesko Luna Luttrell Mann Mast McCormick Moran Norman Palmer Perry Posey Rose Roy Santos Sessions, Republican Locations: Rosendale, Wesley Hunt of Texas, Washington, Georgia, United States, Texas, Colorado
WASHINGTON (AP) — With a government shutdown five days away, Congress is moving into crisis mode as Speaker Kevin McCarthy faces an insurgency from hard-right Republicans eager to slash spending even if it means curtailing federal services for millions of Americans. Against the mounting chaos, President Joe Biden warned the Republican conservatives off their hardline tactics, saying funding the federal government is “one of the most basic fundamental responsibilities of Congress." Political Cartoons View All 1179 Images“We made a deal, we shook hands, and said this is what we’re going to do. With five days to go before Saturday's deadline, the turmoil is unfolding as House Republicans hold their first Biden impeachment inquiry hearing this week probing the business dealings of his son, Hunter Biden. With just days remaining before a shutdown, several of the holdouts say they will never vote for any stopgap measure to fund the government as they push for Congress to engage in the full-scale debate.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, it's, McCarthy, Joe Biden, Biden, reneging, ” Biden, , , Donald Trump, retakes, Hunter Biden, ” Trump, ” McCarthy, Let’s, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Trump, Ken Buck, Buck, he's, ” Buck, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Matt Gaetz, ” Gatez, “ I’m, McCarthy “, Seung Min Kim, Kevin Freking, Mary Clare Jalonick Organizations: WASHINGTON, Senate, Republicans, Trump, Biden, Capitol, Defense, Homeland Security, Agriculture, Foreign, Republican, Democratic, Ukraine, Washington, Russia, Fox, White, Office of Management, Budget, Associated Press Locations: Ukraine, U.S, , State, Florida
The House Foreign Affairs Committee will hold a hearing next Thursday on AUMFs. That tees up a potential repeal of the more than 20-year-old law, which authorized the Iraq war. The Senate easily passed a bill to do just that earlier this year, but it's stalled in the House. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe effort to repeal the Iraq war powers has been stalled for months in the House, largely owing to the opposition of defense-minded Republicans on key committees. But dozens of House Republicans also voted for the bill.
Persons: it's, Leslie Shedd, Ken Buck, Gregory Meeks, Saddam Hussein Organizations: Foreign Affairs, Senate, Service, Iraq, Caucus, House Republicans, Republican Rep, Democratic, Democrats, Republicans, ISIS Locations: Iraq, Wall, Silicon, United States, Colorado, New York
CNN —House Republicans are still struggling to reach consensus on a plan to fund the government, with lawmakers going back-and-forth over the issue and leadership forced to delay a planned procedural vote as they work to find agreement within their ranks. House GOP leaders canceled a procedural rule vote on the proposal originally slated for Tuesday morning amid that opposition from hardliners. Amid the impasse in the House GOP conference, there are discussions underway among some Republicans and Democrats about teaming up on a so-called discharge petition to fund the government if the House Republican-brokered plan fails on the floor this week. Five Republicans – most of them from the right flank House Freedom Caucus – voted against the rule, denying House GOP leadership of the 218 votes it needed for passage. Chip Somodevilla/Getty ImagesRep. Ralph Norman, a South Carolina Republican, said he thinks they should work through the weekend until they are able to find agreement among House Republicans on how to keep the government open.
Persons: , Nancy Mace, Tom Emmer –, Kevin Hern, Hern, Hakeem Jeffries, Republicans –, Caucus –, McCarthy, Kevin McCarthy, Scott Perry, Bob Good, Virginia, Byron Donalds, Chip Somodevilla, Ralph Norman, Chip Roy, ” Roy, , haven’t, Roy, ” Donalds, Perry, ” Perry, Matt Gaetz, Norman, Andy Ogles, Dan Bishop of, Andy Biggs of, Tim Burchett, Anna Paulina Luna of, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Rosendale, Victoria Spartz, Eli Crane of, Cory Mills, Wesley Hunt, Wesley Hunt of Texas, Paul Gosar, Burchett, Bishop, Norman –, Ken Buck, Tom Cole of, Cole, ” Cole, “ That’s Organizations: CNN — House Republicans, GOP, Democratic, South Carolina Republican, Republican, , CNN, Democrats, Politico, House Republicans, Department of Defense, Republicans, Caucus, Freedom Caucus, House Republican, Capitol, Getty, Texas Republican, Florida GOP Rep, Senate, , Defense, Ken Buck of Colorado . Locations: Pennsylvania, Florida, Washington ,, Texas, Tennessee, Dan Bishop of North Carolina, Andy Biggs of Arizona, Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Matt Rosendale of Montana, Victoria, Victoria Spartz of Indiana, Eli Crane of Arizona, Cory Mills of Florida, Wesley Hunt of, Paul Gosar of Arizona, , Biggs, Rosendale, Ken Buck of Colorado
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