Republicans have at long last elected a House speaker: Representative Mike Johnson, a fundamentalist Christian who was also once called a key ā€œarchitectā€ in Congressā€™s efforts to overthrow the 2020 election.

Johnson finally secured the speakerā€™s gavel after Republican infighting left the House without a speaker for 22 days. He secured 220 votes.

Johnson is a four-term congressman representing Louisiana. His win also represents the rise of the MAGA front in the Republican Party. Earlier Wednesday morning, Donald Trump endorsed Johnson as House speakerā€”after quickly killing Mike Emmerā€™s nomination the day before.

  • orclev@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    How do you think heā€™ll get removed? It took them this long to agree on someone to elect, it seems unlikely enough of them would agree to remove him. They could maybe get the Democrats along with a small subset of Republicans to vote him out like the last time, but Iā€™m not sure the Democrats would be up for that. Maybe if they wait until right before the election, but I canā€™t imagine the GOP being dumb enough to oust the speaker right before elections happen (although that does raise the question of who certifies the election if thereā€™s no speaker. Iā€™m assuming the speaker pro tem?).

    • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      How do you think heā€™ll get removed?

      Via the same rule through which McCarthy was removed. After years of a Motion to Vacate the speakership requiring much more than a single vote, the GOP demanded that it be reverted to an older, single vote rule before McCarthy would be considered for speaker. This is before the first vote was ever cast, and that rule still stands. It was written into the 118th Congress rules and has not been rescinded.

      In other words, the GOP can do this over and over and over again, as many times as they get a call from Putin to do so. They can oust any and every speaker at will, keeping Congress at a standstill and the government in chaos as long as they can get a simple GOP majority vote.

      But they wonā€™t have to, because this asshole is one of the Rs that voted against the continuing resolution that is the only thing keeping government open right now. When that 45-day clock runs out in November, the new Speaker is going to stonewall just like he did before, and will likely keep his seat throughout any government shutdown he succeeds in creating.

      • candybrie@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        They can oust any and every speaker at will, keeping Congress at a standstill and the government in chaos as long as they can get a simple GOP majority vote.

        They donā€™t need a GOP majority vote. They need a house majority vote. And unless dems have some compelling reason to keep the republican speaker (unlikely), it only takes a handful from the GOP to oust the speaker. I think McCarthy only lost 8 republican votes.

    • Wrench@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The only possible chance the democrats donā€™t collectively vote him out, given the chance, is if the budget hasnā€™t gone through yet. Otherwise, they will take any call to eject the speaker as an opportunity to oust him.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I tend to agree, but letā€™s remember that Republicans ousted McCarthy, it only took one member requesting to call for a vote, and they had had a giant number of votes to get him in initially. Those maga Republicans are nutty, I wouldnā€™t count on them not getting pissed off and trying to break all the toys again.