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Seventh time’s a charm? McCarthy loses another round of speaker votes as GOP chaos goes on another day

No party in control of the House has failed to elect a speaker on first vote in 100 years

John Bowden
Washington DC
,Eric Garcia
Thursday 05 January 2023 08:54 EST
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Moment Kevin McCarthy loses fourth vote for House speaker

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Kevin McCarthy has once again made history by losing his fourth, fifth, and sixth consecutive votes for speaker of the House.

The latest defeats occurred Wednesday afternoon after a brief confusion over whether the House would not simply adjourn without taking any votes.

This time, Republican rebels seeking to block Mr McCarthy from becoming speaker rallied behind Rep Byron Donalds, a Florida Republican who has only been in the House of Representatives since 2021. Twenty members backed Mr Donalds, meaning that the GOP leader failed to win over even a single one of his colleauges overnight.

In fact, he actually lost one vote, that of Rep Victoria Spartz, who voted “present” on the fourth ballot rather than supporting him as she did previously. There was no sign of any effect whatsoever from the all-caps endorsement of Mr McCarthy that former President Donald Trump issued on Truth Social hours before the vote began.

The votes continued throughout the day Wednesday, with little sign of meaningful movement in any direction. The only significant change was the movement of rebel votes to Mr Donalds from Jim Jordan, who a day earlier declined to put himself forward as a compromise candidate and voted himself for Mr McCarthy.

The California Republican and previous leader of the GOP caucus remained adamant heading into Wednesday’s vote that he would emerge as speaker when the process concluded. But on Wednesday, even Republicans were beginning to acknowledge the scope of the disarray that their party finds itself in, calling the process “messy” as it transpired.

“It’s a feature, not a bug,” Rep Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin argued in his speech nominating his ally, Mr McCarthy, for the fourth time.

Democrats, meanwhile, remained unified behind Hakeem Jeffries. The New York congressman came out ahead thanks to the defections of rebel GOP members from Mr McCarthy’s total. Were the other totals to remain unchanged, he would only actually need to pick up five votes himself to become speaker.

Mr Jeffries’s caucus has thus far resisted any attempts by Mr McCarthy’s team to have members vote “present”, which would lower the threshhold needed for his victory. They’ve also yet to come out formally behind any centrist Republican candidate who could win their support over Mr McCarthy, a move discussed by Rep Fred Upton and others on Tuesday as a possible means of freezing out conservatives.

Those conservatives may be more resistant than ever before to ending their campaign to block Mr McCarthy from becoming speaker.

One Republican congresswoman-elect, Anna Paulina Luna, told The Independent that several members of the so-called “Never Kevin” group had left Tuesday’s GOP caucus meeting feeling “disrespected” and likely in the camp of being unmovable on the issue.

Allies of Mr McCarthy were biting in their criticism of the rebels, even as those same rebels urged them to stop the attacks.

“It’s about egos, not about policy,” Rep Nancy Mace told The Independent. “They were asked point blank yesterday, what more do they want? They didn’t have an answer.”

Mike Garcia, another Republican ally of Mr McCarthy, added of the holdouts: “I think they are marginalising themselves.”

The votes were broken up by brief periods in which members dissolved into conversations on the floor. CSPAN cameras captured conservatives having animated conversations with their Republican colleagues, though it wasn’t clear whether either side was making much progress in convincing holdout members.

The chamber moved to recess until later in the evening just after 4pm, when the sixth vote concluded. But there was no sign that Kevin McCarthy was on the verge, or even anywhere close, to convincing a single holdout Republican to vote for him.

The holdouts, for their part, predicted even further defections from Mr McCarthy’s camp if the chamber reconvened later that night.

“I think you're going to continue to see attrition from Kevin McCarthy, from the votes that he's receiving. I think you may see significant attrition in the vote tonight, if we come back again and vote again at eight o'clock tonight,” Congressman Bob Good told The Independent.

He went on to predict: “And so they are ready. Increasingly ready, I believe to look at other candidates as that reality sets in.”

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