AP
October 19, 2015
House
Republicans return to Washington this week to confront a nearly
unprecedented leadership crisis, looming budget deadlines and a deeply
uncertain future.
Attention
is focused on Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the GOP's 2012 vice
presidential nominee, who is under pressure from party leaders to run
for House speaker — a job he
repeatedly has made clear he does not want.
Even
if Ryan yields to his colleagues' pleas, conservatives are increasingly
serving notice that the 45-year-old House Ways and Means Committee
chairman will have to audition
for the job just like anyone else, despite the widespread support he
has.
That
suggests that the same hard-liners who pushed current Speaker John
Boehner, R-Ohio, to announce his resignation and scared off his heir
apparent, Majority Leader
Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., could throw up obstacles to Ryan, too.
It
also leaves any resolution unclear for a party that seems nearly
irreparably divided. More than a half-dozen lawmakers are considering
running for speaker if Ryan does
not, even as hard-liners warn that Boehner risks more rebellions if he
stays on past his planned departure date of Oct. 29.
"John
is a lame duck. There was a reason John announced his resignation,"
said Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina, a leader of the House Freedom
Caucus. "I think Paul
does have the credibility across the conference to be able to unite us,
but to say he's the only one I think is hyperbole."
"It's
not just the conservatives Paul would have to convince," Mulvaney
added. "Everybody's interested in a new type of leadership."
The
turmoil comes as Congress confronts the need to raise the federal
borrowing limit by early November or risk a market-shattering default,
and delicate talks are underway
to come up with a budget deal to avoid a government shutdown in two
months. The task of raising the debt limit is falling to Boehner. But he
will have to tread carefully, given GOP objections to an increase
without concessions from President Barack Obama —
something the White House is ruling out.
Rep.
Thomas Massie of Kentucky, one of the Republican rebels, said he would
consider forcing a vote to push Boehner out of the speaker's chair if
Boehner engages in "nefarious
activity." Massie defined that as "running the tables" on legislation
not supported by a majority of Republicans. Boehner has suggested he
wants to "clean the barn" before leaving Congress so his successor does
not have a lot of unfinished business.
But Massie said he doesn't draw a "red line" at the debt limit.
The
unrest in Congress coincides with a chaotic GOP presidential primary
dominated by candidates far afield from the political establishment, as
Republican voters push
for action, change and confrontation with Obama.
It
may be difficult for any House speaker to satisfy those demands, with
Obama still in the White House and minority Democrats in the Senate
using that chamber's rules
to bottle-up legislation passed by the majority-rule House.
The
job of speaker "would more or less fall in the category of thankless
task, because people are not going to be in agreement with anything that
a speaker does," said
Rep. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, one of the lawmakers who says she
is being encouraged to consider the job.
For
Ryan, who may harbor presidential ambitions, the job is unlikely to be
the best stepping-stone. Only four speakers or former speakers captured
their parties' presidential
nominations, and just one won the White House — former Speaker James
Polk in 1844.
Already
Ryan is under attack from some conservatives inside and outside
Congress for his support of comprehensive immigration legislation.
Rep.
Steve King of Iowa, Congress' leading immigration hard-liner, said Ryan
would be unlikely to win support from House conservatives opposed to
any "pro-amnesty" politician.
"There's
definitely an undercurrent of concern among conservatives in the House
that make it unlikely they would step forward and support Paul Ryan,
especially in a bloc,"
King said.
Last
week, King circulated a letter to fellow House Republicans aimed at
building support for Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida, the preferred
candidate of the Freedom Caucus
and other conservative groups in the House, including the Conservative
Opportunity Society, which King heads.
"Other
than one candidate dropping out, nothing has changed in the race for
speaker," King's letter said. "The best candidate, Daniel Webster, is
gaining momentum for
his demonstrated leadership."
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