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House narrowly votes to keep Johnson as Republican Speaker

By Calvin FreiburgerJanuary 3, 2025 at 3:14 PM
House narrowly votes to keep Johnson as Republican Speaker
YouTube/Screenshot | Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson

Embattled Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson won retention of his leadership position Friday, following the reversal of two votes to oust him and returning President Donald Trump endorsing him as the who he wants to help enact his agenda in the new year.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (LifeSiteNews) –– Embattled Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson won retention of his leadership position Friday, following the reversal of two votes to oust him and great consternation over how best to pursue a new GOP agenda with the incoming Trump administration.

Republican Reps. Ralph Norman (SC), Thomas Massie (KY) and Keith Self (TX) voted against Johnson on the first ballot, but Norman and Self changed their votes later in the afternoon, giving Johnson the majority needed to win, and cutting off a lengthy spectacle of the sort that followed the revolt last year that replaced former Speaker Kevin McCarthy with Johnson.

Johnson became a lightning rod for criticism almost as soon as he became speaker, largely over differences between Republican leadership and parts of the grassroots over federal spending and foreign aid. Most recently, he presided over a bitter government funding battle that was complicated by returning President Donald Trump's calls for the debt ceiling to be eliminated before he is sworn back into the White House. Johnson eventually approved a stopgap funding bill that did not include that demand, prompting many in Trump's "MAGA" base to call for his ouster.

Trump himself, however, gave Johnson his "Complete & Total Endorsement," calling him a "fine man of great ability" and urging House Republicans to support him so that settled Congressional leadership is in place. Some such as Massie continued their opposition to Johnson, but the lack of a viable alternative that wanted the job or had a chance at getting enough votes stymied their efforts.

Republicans won both chambers of Congress along with the presidency in the 2024 elections, but the new House majority is just 219-215 thanks to the resignation of scandal-plagued Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz and will temporarily be even smaller when additional House members resign their seats to accept appointments in the new Trump administration.

U.S. & Politics
January 3, 2025 at 3:14 PM
CF

Calvin Freiburger

Calvin Freiburger is a Wisconsin-based conservative writer and 2011 graduate of Hillsdale College. His commentary and analysis have been featured on NewsReal Blog, Live Action, and various other conservative websites. Before joining LifeSiteNews, he spent two years in Washington, DC, working to build support for the Life at Conception Act with the National Pro-Life Alliance, then worked a year and a half as assistant editor of TheFederalistPapers.org. You can follow him on Twitter @CalFreiburger, and check out his Substack: calvinfreiburger.substack.com.
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Article At A Glance

  • Embattled Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson won retention of his leadership position Friday, following the reversal of two votes to oust him and returning President Donald Trump endorsing him as the who he wants to help enact his agenda in the new year.

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