Rep. Paul Ryan announced Thursday that he will seek to replace Rep. John Boehner as speaker of the House.
The 2012 Republican nominee for vice president reversed his previous position that he wasn’t interested in the job after intense public pressure from the Republican caucus, which deemed him the lone consensus candidate for the role. After repeatedly saying he didn’t want the the job, which is third in line to the presidency, the Wisconsin lawmaker appeared to hedge this week, presenting a series of conditions under which he would run with an emphasis on party unity.
“We have an opportunity to turn the page, to start with a clean slate, and to rebuild what has been lost. We can make the House a more open and inclusive body—one where every member can contribute to the legislative process. We can rally House Republicans around a bold agenda that will tackle the country’s problems head on. And we can show the country what a commonsense conservative agenda looks like,” Ryan wrote to a letter to members of the House Republican conference on Thursday.
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The biggest potential roadblock to Ryan’s speakership had been widely viewed as the fiercely conservative House Freedom Caucus, which believed that the leadership under Boehner was not adequately representative of the conservative base and stifled their influence through the procedural process in the House.
On Wednesday, the Freedom Caucus declined to formally endorse Ryan or his specific requests (including a call to reform a “motion to vacate the chair” rule that was considered a constant threat to Boehner’s standing), but a solid majority of them said they would vote for him as speaker. Meanwhile, Boehner himself predicted that same day that Ryan should have all the support he needs to replace him.









