The three Republicans vying for House speaker will face off Thursday
in a vote that could signal whether a caucus beset by infighting and
tactical confusion can come together once John Boehner leaves office.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., is considered the
front-runner, but will compete against Reps. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and
Daniel Webster, R-Fla.
McCarthy is said to be trying to distance himself from Boehner, amid
some conservative concerns he'd represent a mere continuation of the
sitting speaker's term. The other candidates also are vowing a fresh
start.
"I think McCarthy's pitch was `I'm not John Boehner, I'm going to run
things differently, I'm my own man,"' Rep. Blake Farenthold, R-Texas,
said after the candidates made their pitches to members during a meeting
Tuesday.
The vote set for Thursday is not the final floor vote; that will take
place Oct. 29. On Thursday Republicans will select their nominee for
speaker, who then would be seen as the odds-on favorite for the post
since they hold the majority in the chamber. However, parliamentary
rules could make for an unpredictable vote on Oct. 29.
The speaker's race already has seen a few curveballs since Boehner
suddenly announced his retirement at the end of the month and McCarthy
swiftly positioned himself as the presumptive next in line.
Shortly after announcing his candidacy, McCarthy was seen to stumble
in a Fox News interview where he appeared to link Hillary Clinton's
dropping poll numbers to the congressional Benghazi committee. His
comments fueled Democratic charges that the committee is merely
political, which GOP leaders deny.
McCarthy himself has walked back the comments, and the leader of that
committee, South Carolina Rep. Trey Gowdy, told MSNBC on Wednesday that
"Kevin screwed up." He also noted McCarthy had "apologized" for the
remark.
Amid the backlash over McCarthy's Benghazi remarks, Chaffetz entered the leadership race over the weekend.
Boehner also decided to postpone other leadership elections until after the Oct. 29 full House vote for speaker.
Whether McCarthy can rally the GOP caucus behind him is an open
question. He is thought to have by far the most votes in his corner, but
Chaffetz -- while admitting he's the underdog -- says he's furiously
talking to members. The media-savvy and highly visible chairman of the
House oversight committee claims he can bridge the Boehner-era divide
among House Republicans, whose differences have fueled fights over
budgets, ObamaCare, the debt ceiling and most recently Planned
Parenthood.
"I think it's time for a fresh new start," Chaffetz told Fox News.
"Kevin clearly has the majority of our conference. My fear is (he)
doesn't have 218 votes on the floor of the House."
Chaffetz, though, pledges he'll support the eventual nominee.
In another development, the House Freedom Caucus, consisting of some
30 to 40 members, issued a statement late Wednesday saying that after
exchanges with all the candidates, it would vote for Webster in
Thursday’s election because he would be “best equipped to earn back the
trust of the American people.”
A divided vote on Thursday could preview problems for the Oct. 29 election and beyond.
That's because in order for the House to formally choose a speaker, a
majority of members must back a single candidate. The magic number,
referenced by Chaffetz, is likely 218 (though it could be lower,
depending on absences and other factors) -- and nobody can win the
speakership without reaching that level of support.
Republicans have nearly 250 members in the House and on paper have
the numbers to win against the Democrats' nominee, likely Nancy Pelosi.
But if the winning Republican nominee on Thursday comes out with a tally
short of 218, he'll have to spend the next several weeks trying to
rally support to get to that number.
Some conservative groups and members were pushing back against
McCarthy's bid in the run-up to Thursday's vote. On Wednesday, the Tea
Party Patriots were passing around shirts with a cartoon image of
McCarthy holding a glass of wine and a cigarette over the name,
"McBoehner," in a bid to cast him as the speaker's double.
In a curious development, Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., also sent a
letter to House Republican Conference Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers,
R-Wash., urging a full vetting of all leadership candidates to avoid a
repeat of 1998, when the conference selected then-Rep. Bob Livingston in
November to succeed outgoing House Speaker Newt Gingrich. It then
emerged Livingston had been conducting an affair. Jones asked that any
candidate who has committed "misdeeds" withdraw.
Asked by FoxNews.com to elaborate, Jones said he doesn't "know
anything" specific about any of the candidates, but, "We need to be able
to say without reservation that 'I have nothing in my background that
six months from now could be exposed to the detriment of the House of
Representatives.'" He said he wants to make sure the candidates have "no
skeletons."