Scalise, the Majority Leader, had secured his party’s nomination to replace ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy but was still short of the 217 votes needed to be elected on the House floor, as several of his fellow Republicans said they would not support him.

Republicans could afford no more than four defections - they control the House by a narrow 221-212 margin - if they wanted to end the House’s leaderless bout that has already lasted nine days.

“I just shared with my colleagues that I was withdrawing my name as a candidate for our speaker designee,” Scalise told reporters.

“If you look at over the last few weeks, if you look at where our conference is, there is still work to be done … There are still some people that have their own agendas,” he said.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    This is pretty much confirmation that the far-right’s agenda is to prove the government is ineffective and corrupt by actively making it happen.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    The only way this ends is if moderate republicans start negotiating with democrats, which will cause the far right to fall in line or lose all power in the house.

    This is a great opportunity for a bipartisan house, but it will never happen in this political climate.