
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee leaves the Republican caucus meeting at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 19, 2023. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)
Congress is in gridlock as Republicans are now in their third week of being unable to elect a new House Speaker after a far-right group of conservatives forced a vote to oust former leader Kevin McCarthy (R-California).
What’s happening with efforts to find a new leader of the US House?
Since McCarthy’s removal, not a single Republican lawmaker has been able to get the number of votes necessary to become House Speaker—the person tasked with leading the House and essentially overseeing the legislative process.
How many votes does it take for a person to become Speaker of the House?
It usually takes 218 votes—a simple majority of the 435 members of the House—to become House Speaker, but due to two vacancies in the House right now, only 217 votes are needed.
Both of the major political parties nominate one candidate for the position of Speaker, and the candidate from the majority party usually wins.
Why have lawmakers struggled to elect a new Speaker?
Since Republicans hold the majority, the task essentially falls to them to decide who should lead the House. But over the past two weeks, the party’s various factions have attacked each other publicly and privately over McCarthy’s ouster and their disagreements over who should lead the party.
As the GOP’s infighting continues, the House remains without a speaker as wars escalate in the Middle East and Ukraine, and the US government faces a possible shutdown in just four weeks.
So who’s in the running?
Two different conservative candidates—Louisiana congressman Steve Scalise and Ohio lawmaker Jim Jordan—have been selected as possible nominees in recent weeks, only for each of them to fail to secure enough support among fellow Republicans to win the speakership.
Scalise and Jordan’s failures to win over enough of their peers comes in part due to their controversial records.
Scalise once called himself “David Duke without the baggage,” referring to the white supremacist and KKK member from his home state. Jordan, meanwhile, has been credibly accused of ignoring claims of sexual abuse during his time as an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State University in the 1980s and 90s and was one of the most active participants in Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election.
Jordan has undertaken an aggressive public and private pressure campaign to try and persuade his detractors, but those heavy-handed tactics have backfired, angering many of his fellow conservatives and leading at least two Republicans to get death threats from voters.
Jordan lost 22 Republican votes during his second attempt to win the speakership on Wednesday, before vowing Thursday to try again a third time.
Democrats, meanwhile, have voted to support House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries each time. They’ve also shown a willingness to partner with moderate Republicans to empower acting speaker pro tempore Patrick McHenry (R-North Carolina)—who can currently only preside over floor debate and voting for a new speaker—and give him temporary authorities to help the House emerge from its current paralysis and once again consider certain legislation.
But Jordan and some other Republicans have ruled out the idea of compromising or working with Democrats, even as they have proven to be utterly unable to select a leader—a basic first step in governance.
What’s next?
No one knows.

Sweeping cuts to social programs have voters on edge
Medicaid cuts may impact everyone from parents to children and other vulnerable Nevada populations. At a press conference on Tuesday, Donna Smith, a...

Republicans pass Trump’s sweeping budget bill, cutting $500 billion in Medicare funding
The plan would add $3.8 trillion to the federal deficit while shifting resources away from everyday Americans to the country’s wealthiest. US House...

AOC and Bernie Sanders urge Democrats to fight harder during stop in North Las Vegas
At a time when Democratic leadership faces pressure to push back on Donald Trump’s agenda, progressive leaders Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie...

Trump’s plan to gut Medicaid to pay for tax cuts for billionaires ‘would be devastating for Nevadans,’ senator warns
Nevada Democratic US Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto said a Republican plan to cut taxes on the rich can only be offset by about $880 billion in cuts to...

Cortez Masto reintroduces bill to improve access to behavioral health and substance use disorder treatments
Nevada’s senior US Senator says the COMPLETE Care Act would allow primary care clinics to hire mental health professionals — a model that experts...

Discurso de Donald Trump en el Congreso: chequeo en español y resumen de falsedades, afirmaciones sin contexto y verdades
Si sólo tienes unos segundos, lee estas líneas: El presidente Donald Trump divulgó varias desinformaciones en su discurso ante el Congreso. El...