Arkansas’s House delegation is split in its support for GOP Rep. Jim Jordan in the race for U.S. House Speaker.
Northeast Arkansas First District Congressman Rick Crawford says he’s a “Yes” vote for Jordan, based on a post from his X (Twitter) account. The Washington Post also notes Rep. French Hill, from the Second District, is also voting for Jordan.
I look forward to voting for Jim Jordan to be our next speaker tomorrow. I hope this brings stability and lets us refocus on reducing government spending, securing the border, and supporting Israel against Hamas terrorists.
— Rep. Rick Crawford (@RepRickCrawford) October 16, 2023
However, Northwest Arkansas Rep. Steve Womack told KURM radio in Rogers this morning he is voting for Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise.
No official word yet from Rep. Bruce Westerman, from the Fourth District, on how his vote will land.
The House Speaker race has been a source of frustration and gridlock in Washington over the past few days. Jordan will need 217 votes to win in today’s vote. In a vote among Republicans on Friday, Jordan came up short with a tally of 152-55.
House Republicans are scheduled to vote this morning for the next leader, two weeks after House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted from his position.
Here’s more information on the House Speaker vote from The Associated Press:
Jim Jordan scrambling to shore up the votes ahead of election for House speaker
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House of Representatives is set to vote on Jim Jordan’s nomination for speaker on Tuesday afternoon, two weeks after the chamber ousted Kevin McCarthy from the top spot.
Jordan was scrambling to shore up the votes needed to clinch the speakership in the closely divided chamber. He can likely only lose a few GOP votes to win the nod.
Trump says Jordan will be ‘GREAT Speaker’
Donald Trump is reupping his support of his top ally in the House ahead of the vote for speaker.
“Jim Jordan will be a GREAT Speaker of the House,” the former president said on social media.
Trump also reiterated his backing of Jordan while appearing Tuesday morning at his civil fraud trial in New York. Trump described the 59-year-old Jordan as “a fantastic young man” who “loves our country.”
He said he thinks Jordan will have the votes soon, if not Tuesday.
Trump had been an early backer of Jordan and worked against the Republicans’ first nominee to be speaker, Majority Leader Steve Scalise. Trump wrote, “As everyone knows, I have long ago given him my Complete and Total Endorsement!”
Jordan feeling confident heading into vote
Jordan says he’s been picking up support daily and feels good ahead of the vote for House speaker.
“I feel confident,” he said Tuesday while trailed by a scrum of reporters in the Capitol.
When asked if he thought it would take many rounds for him to become speaker, he said he is in the race for the long haul. “Whatever it takes,” he said.
Jordan was spotted heading into the speaker’s office, about a half hour before the vote was expected to start.
Meanwhile, in the Senate …
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says the chamber will move quickly to respond to the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas despite the House remaining in limbo.
“With the House in disarray, the Senate will not wait to vote on an Israeli aid package,” the New York Democrat said on the floor. “We can’t wait for the House. Who knows what will happen there?”
Concerns over Jordan’s lack of legislative chops
While Jordan has made a reputation as a chaos agent in his time in Congress, the Ohio Republican, unlike previous speaker candidates, has no real legislative chops.
In his 16 years in Washington, not a single bill bearing Jordan’s name has been signed into law.
Instead, he has spent his time in Congress fighting to get retribution for his political allies, to kill legislation, and eventually to maneuver his way to becoming the top Republican on some of the chamber’s most powerful committees.
His lack of legislative experience has been a criticism that moderates and Democrats have deployed against him in recent days. But his office has pushed back, saying he has been instrumental in getting legislation through the committees he serves on without putting his name on it.
A once-unimaginable House speaker
Jordan’s journey to the cusp of House speakership would have once seemed far-fetched.
He was the founding member of the House Freedom Caucus, a group of conservative hardliners who pressured House Speaker John Boehner to step aside in 2015. Boehner famously called him a “legislative terrorist.”
Should Jordan succeed, it would help cement the far right’s takeover of the Republican Party and trigger fresh conflict with Democrats over the size and scope of government.
But a Jordan speakership would also come with baggage that could present a challenge to Republicans as they labor to hold their House majority in next year’s election, an effort that will likely hinge on drawing support from moderate voters in swing districts.
Jordan clinches support of Biden-district Republican
Hours before a floor vote, one of former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s most loyal supporters threw his support behind Jordan after days of hesitation.
Rep. Juan Ciscomani, R-Ariz., a first-term member, said that after having several conversations with Jordan, he’s decided to vote for him on the floor.
“There’s too much at stake to continue to be stalled,” he posted on X, the website formerly known as Twitter. “I came to D.C. to work—not sit around.”
Ciscomani was one of at least a dozen Republicans who had yet to throw their support behind Jordan. He represents a district won by Democrat Joe Biden in the 2020 election.
Are we looking at 15 rounds of voting again?
It’s unlikely.
House Republicans are exhausted by weeks of infighting over who will lead the conference and frustrated by the inability of the chamber to pass legislation, particularly in response to the Israel-Hamas war.
Jordan’s supporters are confident that the public floor vote will force the remaining holdouts to flip their way. After five days, Kevin McCarthy narrowly won the speakership in January on the 15th round of balloting.
What to know from The Associated Press:
Jim Jordan’s rapid rise has been cheered by Trump and the far right.
How the vote for a new speaker works
Scalise ends bid to become speaker as holdouts refuse to back him
McCarthy was an early architect of the GOP majority that became his downfall
Speaker McCarthy ousted in historic House vote
Have a news tip or event to promote? Email White River Now at news@whiterivernow.com. Be sure to like and follow us on Facebook and Twitter. And don’t forget to download the White River Now mobile app from the Google Play Store or the Apple App Store.
Get up-to-date local and regional news/weather from the First Community Bank Newsroom on Arkansas 103.3 KWOZ every weekday morning and afternoon. White River Now updates are also aired on weekday mornings on 93 KZLE, Outlaw 106.5, and Your FM 99.5.