Jim Jordan fails in second US House speaker vote
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Conservative Jim Jordan has sought more time to bolster his faltering bid for the top job in the United States House of Representatives after losing a second vote, while his fellow Republicans considered a backup option for the leaderless chamber.
Jordan, a member of the party’s right flank with support from former president Donald Trump, failed to earn enough support in a Wednesday vote to secure the speakership. He said he expects a third vote to be held on Thursday.“It’s just painfully obvious that what a lot of our people want to do we can’t do,” said Republican Representative Steve Womack, who voted against Jordan. “We’d like to elect a speaker, and we can’t even do that.”
The House, which makes up one-half of the bicameral US legislative branch, with the Senate as the second half, has been without a leader for more than two weeks, with continued infighting fracturing the Republican Party’s thin majority.But the second straight loss has made it difficult to imagine a path that could lead Jordan to the speakership.
Republicans are considering possible alternatives for the chamber in the event that they cannot settle on a speaker, including handing Representative Patrick McHenry, who is serving as the interim speaker, expanded powers.
Once seen as a routine procedure in the House, a fractious but thin Republican majority has struggled to find consensus. The group of about 20 Republicans who have voted against Jordan represent a range of grievances, rather than coming from one single wing of the party.
Some have expressed their belief that Jordan, a hard-right figure, is too extreme to lead the body. Others have objected to what they describe as his arm-twisting methods of gaining support.