Republican Kevin McCarthy was toppled Tuesday as US House speaker by dissidents within his own party, ending his tumultuous nine months in the job and sending a fractious Congress into further disarray.
The 58-year-old veteran California politician, who navigated treacherous political cross-currents to avert a US debt default earlier this year and an Oct. 1 government shutdown, now becomes the first US House speaker removed from his job.
The 216 to 210 vote raises fresh questions about dysfunction in Washington. Moody’s Investors Service, the only remaining major credit grader to give the US a top rating, warned in late September its confidence in the US is wavering because of concerns about “governance.”
Goldman Sachs said in analysis for clients that the ouster raises the risk of a government shutdown next month. McCarthy’s successor will probably be under “even more pressure” to avoid a temporary funding package or additional funding for Ukraine, Goldman said.
President Joe Biden hopes the House will “quickly elect” a new speaker, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement.
McCarthy’s fate was sealed by hardliners frustrated with his bipartisan dealmaking. Democrats, who vented grievances against McCarthy in a closed-door party meeting Tuesday morning, refused to rescue him.
The last time the House even voted on removing a speaker was in 1910. In that case, then-Speaker Joseph Cannon survived the test.
Representative Patrick McHenry of North Carolina was named interim speaker. The chairman of the Financial Services Committee, McHenry has previously said he has no interest in the job.
There’s no obvious successor to unify the fractious party, a vacuum that comes as the US approaches a Nov. 17 deadline to keep the government open. A disruptive shutdown would send cascading effects across the US economy.
US aid to Ukraine, which has become a source of vitriol for GOP hardliners and was dropped from the short-term spending deal, hangs in the balance. So, too, do contentious battles over immigration and asylum policy, and support for the poor.
Legislative business will grind to a halt during the battle over the speaker’s gavel. Republicans immediately called a closed-door party meeting.
“This is unchartered territory,” Texas Republican Jodey Arrington said.
McCarthy did not immediately address reporters.
A determined political survivor who has said he won’t quit, McCarthy could run again for the job immediately. But his first campaign for the speaker took an extraordinary 15 rounds and a second run at the speakership is unlikely to be any easier.
The resolution was brought to the House floor by conservative firebrand Matt Gaetz of Florida.
The vote unfolded in a rare formal roll call on the House floor, requiring each member to stand and declare their decision on whether McCarthy should be removed from his post. It was an echo of the same ritual McCarthy went through 15 times to be elected speaker in January.
Challenges Ahead
McCarthy has bent himself in uncomfortable ways to satisfy the conflicting demands of House Republicans’ divergent factions ever since becoming speaker in January.
He overcame the doubts of many in Washington to strike the deal with Biden to avert a US default with his job intact, but that worsened his already-rocky relations with ultra-conservatives.
Gaetz cited as the final straw McCarthy’s decision to allow a vote Saturday on a last-minute bipartisan temporary funding plan that stopped an Oct. 1 government shutdown.
In the end, McCarthy was unable to negotiate with Democrats or rebel Republicans to save his job.
“House Democrats remain willing to find common ground on an enlightened path forward,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a letter to Democrats before the vote. “Unfortunately, our extreme Republican colleagues have shown no willingness to do the same.”
Gaetz and other Republicans have said they see a universe of other House Republicans — and Republicans outside of Congress — who could win enough support to succeed McCarthy as House speaker.
Names that have been floated include the current second-ranking House Republican, Steve Scalise of Louisiana, whose candidacy would be complicated by medical treatment he is currently receiving for a rare blood cancer.
Other possibilities lawmakers have raised include the party’s third-ranking leader, Representative Tom Emmer of Minnesota; Financial Service Committee Chairman Patrick McHenry of North Carolina; and Rules Committee Chairman Tom Cole of Oklahoma.
--With assistance from Laura Litvan and Steven T. Dennis.
(Updates with new detail in fourth and fifth paragraphs)