House Republicans gathered for a party meeting Friday morning to discuss who will fill the role of speaker and Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin appears to be the consensus candidate, but he hasn’t decided that he wants the job.
Less than 24 hours after leading contender Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California abruptly withdrew his name from the election as tea party-aligned members are demanding one of their own, members are scrambling to determine a path forward.
Ryan is being pressured by leadership to run, but he has consistently said that he’s not interested in the job — a position that could change if persuasion continues, of course.
McCarthy told reporters Friday morning that Ryan is “looking” at the speaker position but that “it has to be his decision.”
Ryan, however, rejects the idea — for now.
“My statement stands. I haven’t changed anything. I’ve got nothing to add right now,” he said.
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Ryan’s spokesperson, Brendan Buck, said Ryan is not running — again for now.
“Chairman Ryan appreciates the support he’s getting from his colleagues but is still not running for Speaker.”
Rep. Darrell Issa of California said of Ryan: “It is very clear he is reconsidering,” adding that he is going to spend the weekend talking to his family about the job that demands many days away from home because of fundraising and leadership demands.
Issa added that Ryan is “under tremendous pressure” because “he is the only candidate we can broadly agree on and get to 240 votes on the floor.”
The California Republican said he would step forward “if only, only if Paul Ryan doesn’t run.”








