‘We’ll have the votes’: McCarthy appears upbeat as House adjourns

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The House Republican leader, Kevin McCarthy, came within striking distance of winning the speakership, in a clear sign of momentum despite losing a 13th consecutive vote on the fourth day of a grinding intra-party showdown.

After the contours of a deal began to emerge late on Thursday night, 15 far-right holdouts dropped their opposition and voted for McCarthy on Friday, when the embattled Republican gave his support to a proposal that would undermine his own power while giving the far-right flank more influence over the legislative process, including the ability to more easily remove a speaker.

“We made some very good progress,” a freshly confident McCarthy said as he left the floor on Friday afternoon after the House voted to adjourn until later that evening. “We’ll come back tonight. I believe at that time we’ll have the votes to finish this once and for all.”

For the first time, McCarthy was the top vote winner, surpassing the Democrats’ choice for speaker, Congressman Hakeem Jeffries of New York, on both the 12th and 13th afternoon ballots. But it was still not enough to cement the top job with the 218 votes traditionally needed to secure the gavel.

“You only earn the position of speaker if you get the votes,” said Congressman Matt Gaetz, a holdout who voted for the conservative congressman Jim Jordan on the 13th ballot. McCarthy, he said earlier in the afternoon, “will not have the votes tomorrow and he will not have the votes next week, next month, next year”.

Building frustration between the holdouts and the rest of the Republican conference had spilled on to the chamber floor at one point during the votes. As Gaetz assailed McCarthy in a nominating speech for his alternative speaker candidate, Congressman Mike Bost, a Republican of Illinois, angrily interjected. shaking a finger at Gaetz he shouted: “This is not going to bring anyone.”

The House clerk banged the gavel, ending the exchange, but several Republicans stormed off the floor in protest as Gaetz finished his remarks. The general mood shifted: Republicans burst into applause with each defection from the rebel camp. McCarthy, who had watched with a forlorn expression as the spectacle of defeat without progress unfolded, was notably more upbeat, smiling and laughing as he listened to the roll call.

“We’re at a turning point,” Congressman Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, a leader of the conservative rebellion who voted for McCarthy on Friday, said. Encouraged by the contours of the emerging deal, Perry said he cast his vote in a “good-faith effort” to end the stalemate.

A handful of members were absent for the fourth day of the speakership election, which was not originally supposed to be a voting day for the House. Congressman Wesley Hunt, a Republican from Texas, had to rush home to be with his wife and newly born son. Congressman David Trone, a Democrat from Maryland, missed the 12th vote because he was undergoing surgery. Trone later returned to the Capitol for the 13th vote, receiving a standing ovation from his colleagues as he cast a ballot for Jeffries with his arm in a sling.

Until a speaker is chosen, the House will continue to operate in a suspended state of paralysis, with members unable to be sworn in and business unable to proceed.

Thursday marked the longest succession of failed speaker votes since the Congress of 1859, which went 44 rounds and two months. Only four other speakership elections in American history have required more than 12 ballots.

“Apparently, I like to make history,” McCarthy had told reporters Thursday night, following an 11th vote that produced in effect the same failed result.

But Friday’s voting also happened in the shadow of the second anniversary of the deadly Capitol assault in 2020, which had began with an attempt by ultra-conservative lawmakers loyal to Donald Trump to stop Congress from certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election that Joe Biden won. Several of those election-denying lawmakers led the revolt against McCarthy.

After initially condemning the insurrection and Trump’s role fomenting it, McCarthy himself traveled to Mar-a-Lago in early 2021 to repair relations with the former president and his loyalists in anticipation of his speaker bid. Trump emphatically endorsed McCarthy this week, but it has so far failed to change any minds.

There is a risk that Republican leadership’s myriad concessions to the party’s hard-right faction could repel more moderate members, who have so far remained loyal to McCarthy. But so far all the momentum has only trended in McCarthy’s favor.

In yet another sign of the shifting tide, the conservative grassroots group FreedomWorks, which had previously mocked McCarthy’s speakership bid, dropped its opposition to his candidacy.

“While details continue to be deliberated on McCarthy’s campaign to 218 votes,” the group’s president said, “today represents a step in the right direction to changing the way business is conducted in Congress.”

Meanwhile, Democrats remained united behind Jeffries as their choice for speaker. He repeatedly won the most votes during the first three days of balloting, but remained short of the majority.

The spectacle foreshadows the difficulties that lie ahead for the Republican party as it aims to reclaim the Senate and the White House in 2024. Already riven by infighting, and constrained by a narrow majority, the party’s new leaders will face many of the same challenges as past Republican speakers, whose tenures were defined by government shutdowns and political brinkmanship.

“It’s new for us being in the majority, but being in a tight majority,” McCarthy told reporters after walking off the House floor on Friday. “I think at the end of the day, we’re going to be more effective, more efficient and definitely the government’s going to be more accountable.”

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