Here Are the House Republicans to Watch if McCarthy’s Bid for Speaker Falters
Representative Kevin McCarthy has so far faced no
viable challenger for the speakership. But if he is unable to secure the votes,
an alternative could quickly emerge.
Republicans may have to propose an alternative speaker
if Representative Kevin McCarthy doesn’t get enough votes.
Catie
Edmondson
By Catie
Edmondson
Jan. 2,
2023
. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/02/us/politics/mccarthy-speaker-alternatives.html
WASHINGTON
— A big factor in Representative Kevin McCarthy’s favor as he labors to become
speaker of the House is that no viable candidate has emerged to challenge him.
A group of
hard-right lawmakers has pledged to block Mr. McCarthy, Republican of
California, in his ascent to the speakership, imperiling his path to the top
job. But he was nominated by a lopsided majority of his conference and has
remained the only broadly supported candidate for the post.
The threat
that some of Mr. McCarthy’s allies have dangled — that moderate Republicans
could band together with Democrats to elect a Democratic speaker should he fail
— is highly improbable.
But the
landscape could quickly change should Mr. McCarthy falter on Tuesday, when the
new Congress convenes and lawmakers vote to elect a new speaker. House
precedent requires that lawmakers continue voting on ballot after ballot if no
one is able to win the gavel. If Mr. McCarthy is unable to quickly win
election, Republicans would be under immense pressure to coalesce around an
alternative, ending a potentially chaotic and divisive fight on the floor that
could taint the start of their majority in the House.
Here are
the Republicans to watch:
The Deputy: Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana
Mr. Scalise, the No. 2 House Republican, is in some
ways Mr. McCarthy’s obvious successor.
Deeply
conservative and always on message, Mr. Scalise began his ascent up the
leadership ranks in Congress when he became the chairman of the influential
right-wing Republican Study Committee and beat out a candidate who endorsed a
more combative approach to dealing with party leadership. Speculation about his
ambition to one day become speaker has followed him ever since.
The party’s
hard-right flank is not altogether trusting of Mr. Scalise, in part because the
whip has sometimes quietly staked out neutral or mainstream positions when his
colleagues have gone the other way. He broke with most other top House leaders
in declining to endorse the primary challenger to Representative Liz Cheney of
Wyoming, who was exiled by Republicans for repudiating former President Donald
J. Trump’s election lies.
At the
internal conference election to choose party leaders in November,
Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Matt Gaetz of Florida
pressed Mr. Scalise about comments he made on a private conference call days
after the Jan. 6 riot. During that call, Mr. Scalise agreed with Mr. McCarthy
that Mr. Gaetz’s comments about conservatives he deemed insufficiently loyal to
Mr. Trump had been dangerous and “potentially illegal.”
Still, many
rank-and-file lawmakers regard Mr. Scalise as a solid alternative and one seen
by some conservative lawmakers as a more palatable option than Mr. McCarthy.
The Firebrand: Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio
Mr. Jordan,
a founder of the Freedom Caucus, helped upend Mr. McCarthy’s last bid to become
speaker in 2015. He continued to be an irritant to the California Republican
when he challenged Mr. McCarthy, unsuccessfully, for the top leadership
position in 2018.
But Mr.
McCarthy worked to mend fences with Mr. Jordan when he paved the way for him to
take the top seat on the Judiciary Committee and dispatched him as a pugilistic
defender of Mr. Trump during two impeachments.
It is
unclear whether the more moderate lawmakers in the party would back a bid by
Mr. Jordan for speaker. But he has a number of disciples among the far-right
group of lawmakers who have vowed to oppose Mr. McCarthy.
The Dark Horse: Representative Patrick T. McHenry of
North Carolina
Mr. McHenry
came to Congress in 2005 at the age of 29 as a conservative rabble-rouser, and
was frequently seen yelling on the House floor or on cable news shows.
But in the
years that followed, the silver-haired, bow-tie-wearing Mr. McHenry underwent a
metamorphosis. He became chief deputy whip to Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio,
who later predicted that Mr. McHenry would become speaker himself one day. He
pointedly took a lower-profile, behind-the-scenes approach to the job. And he
developed a reputation among other lawmakers for his braininess and interest in
tax and financial policy.
“What
changed for me was once I slowed down enough to respect the process and to
respect the people that I served with in the institution,” Mr. McHenry once
told a local newspaper. “I was able to get more done when I slowed down and had
respect for others.”
Mr.
McHenry, who has for years been an informal adviser to Mr. McCarthy, has
previously tried to scuttle the notion that he was interested in any top
leadership post, saying he would rather lead the Financial Services Committee.
He once gave the Republican leader a silver bowl in a joking reference to a
famous scene from the crime drama series “The Wire,” in which a former mayor
tells an incoming one that the vaunted top job is akin to eating silver bowls
of feces all day.
He is the
only Republican lawmaker whose name has been floated as a possible candidate
for speaker who voted to certify the 2020 presidential election.
When Ms.
Stefanik first came to the House in 2014 as the youngest woman ever elected to
Congress, she was viewed as a rising star in the mold of Speaker Paul Ryan of
Wisconsin, who had hired her to work on his 2012 campaign for vice president.
She
presented herself as a moderate pragmatist willing to work with Democrats and
hoping to expand the party’s appeal. When Mr. Trump’s star began to rise in the
Republican Party, she remained so skeptical of his inflammatory style that she
refused to say his name in 2016 when she rolled out a tepid endorsement of her
party’s presidential nominee.
But she has
undergone a profound political metamorphosis. Ms. Stefanik is now one of the
former president’s most vociferous and aggressive defenders in Congress. She
became the No. 3 House Republican in May 2021 after the party ousted Ms. Cheney
from the post for her vocal criticism of Mr. Trump.
Catie Edmondson is a reporter in the Washington bureau, covering Congress. @


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