
Republicans drop staunch Trump ally Jim Jordan as U.S. House Speaker nominee
CBC
Republicans dropped Rep. Jim Jordan on Friday as their nominee for U.S. House Speaker, making the decision during a closed-door session after the hard-edged ally of Donald Trump failed badly on a third ballot for the gavel.
With the blocked House impasse deepening, Republicans have no realistic or workable plan to unite the fractured party's majority, elect a new Speaker and return to the work of Congress that has been languishing since hardliners ousted Kevin McCarthy at the start of the month.
Majority Leader Steve Scalise said they're going "come back and start over" on Monday.
In all, Jordan lost 25 Republican colleagues in Friday's vote, leaving him far from the majority needed, with next steps uncertain.
Ahead of the vote, Jordan showed no signs of stepping aside, insisting at a Capitol press conference: "The American people are hungry for change."
Drawing on his Ohio roots, Jordan, who is popular with the Republicans' right-flank activist base of voters, positioned his long-shot campaign alongside the history of American innovators, including the Wright brothers, urging his colleagues to elect him to the Speakership.
McCarthy himself rose in the chamber to nominate Jordan, portraying him as a skilled legislator who reaches for compromise. That drew scoffs of laughter from the Democratic side of the aisle.
McCarthy said of Jordan, "He is straightforward, honest and reliable."
Democrats nominated Leader Hakeem Jeffries, with Rep. Katherine Clark calling Jordan, who refused to certify the 2020 presidential election results, "a threat to democracy."
"We need a Speaker worthy of wielding the gavel," she said.
But after two failed votes, Jordan's third attempt at the gavel did not end any better — in large part because more centrist Republicans are revolting over the nominee and the hardball tactics being used to win their votes. They have been bombarded with harassing phone calls and even reported death threats.
In fact, the hard-charging judiciary committee chairman lost rather than gained votes despite hours spent trying to win over holdouts — no improvement from the 20 and then 22 Republicans he lost in early rounds this week.
Friday's vote was 194 for Jordan, his lowest tally yet, and 210 for Jeffries, with two absences on each side.
For more than two weeks, the stalemate has shut down the U.S. House of Representatives, leaving a seat of American democracy severely hobbled at a time of challenges at home and abroad. The House Republican majority appears to have no idea how to end the political turmoil and get back to work.

The United States broke a longstanding diplomatic taboo by holding secret talks with the militant Palestinian group Hamas on securing the release of U.S. hostages held in Gaza, sources told Reuters on Wednesday, while U.S. President Donald Trump warned of "hell to pay" should the Palestinian militant group not comply.