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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Nolan D. McCaskill

McCarthy falls short again, but says he has the votes to win

WASHINGTON — House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy of California told reporters Friday that he has the votes to be elected speaker, promising an end to a historic stalemate that has paralyzed Congress all week.

As members were approving a Friday afternoon motion to adjourn until 10 p.m. Eastern time, McCarthy told CNN’s Manu Raju that he knew he had the votes to win on the next ballot because he “counted.”

McCarthy flipped more than a dozen votes his way Friday and nearly won enough votes to clinch the speaker’s gavel on the 13th ballot.

The pause in the action will allow a pair of McCarthy supporters who missed the 12th and 13th votes — Reps. Ken Buck, R-Colo., and Wesley Hunt, R-Texas — to return to the Capitol, increasing McCarthy’s vote total from 214 to 216. The break also gives McCarthy and his allies more time to flip two of the remaining six holdouts.

McCarthy’s vote total had fallen from 203 on Tuesday to 200 on Thursday. But Republicans finally began to move in his direction Friday afternoon, when 15 hard-liners who had supported alternatives or voted present on earlier ballots switched their votes to him.

Raucous applause from the Republican conference met each new announcement for McCarthy, though many members who switched their vote to McCarthy said that their flips were contingent upon a deal to reform House rules. The deal is expected to empower a far-right faction of House Republicans by granting them seats on the all-important Rules Committee and other concessions.

“Pending transformational rules changes to empower the rank and file,” Rep. Josh Brecheen, R-Okla., said during his first vote for the GOP leader, “McCarthy.”

On the two-year anniversary of the Capitol insurrection, the GOP-controlled House remained far from under control. Only four other Congresses have required more roll call votes for speaker before a winner emerged. And four days after the 118th Congress convened Tuesday, the House has neither a speaker nor any sworn-in members. There are no committee chairs to launch investigations or hold hearings. There are no rules that can be adopted and no legislation that can pass. Would-be members have lost access to national security intelligence, and an increasing number of them have begun publicly complaining about their offices’ inability to help constituents with casework.

But for the first time this week, Republicans made significant progress toward settling their differences. It remains unclear, though, whether any of the six remaining holdouts will ever risk putting McCarthy over the top. Five conservative Republicans have positioned themselves for months as a hard “no.” Some in the group sent fundraising emails this week highlighting their opposition to McCarthy.

Until Friday, Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York had led every ballot with 212 votes, a show of unity among House Democrats. On the 12th ballot, McCarthy finally surpassed Jeffries, notching 213 to Jeffries’ 211.

McCarthy maintained a lead on the 13th ballot. But until McCarthy — or another Republican — can clinch a clear majority, the House will remain in a state of paralysis, continuing its historic streak of votes for speaker or motions to adjourn.

“You only earn the position of speaker of the House if you can get the votes,” Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., who is among a small group of far-right conservatives who have vowed they will never vote for McCarthy, said on the floor. “Mr. McCarthy doesn’t have the votes today. He will not have the votes tomorrow, and he will not have them next week, next month, next year. And so one must wonder, Madame Clerk, is this an exercise in vanity for someone who has done the math, taken the counts and is putting this institution through something that absolutely is avoidable?”

Democrats applauded some of Gaetz’s remarks, but many Republicans began to file out of the chamber in what appeared to be a clear rejection of his rhetoric.

The Republicans who switched their votes to McCarthy include Brecheen and Reps. Dan Bishop, R-N.C., Michael Cloud, R-Texas, Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., Byron Donalds, R-Fla., Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., Mary Miller, R-Ill., Ralph Norman, R-S.C., Scott Perry, R-Pa., Chip Roy, R-Texas, Keith Self, R-Texas, Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., and Andy Harris, R-Md.

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