Republican Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah has thrown a curveball into the race for House speaker, officially announcing on Sunday that he’ll take on House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy for the high-profile position.
Chaffetz, who chairs the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, painted himself as an outsider and argued on “Fox News Sunday” that he can better “bridge the divide” between moderate and far-right GOPers.
“You don’t just give an automatic promotion to the existing leadership team. That doesn’t signal change,” Chaffetz, a tea party favorite, said in reference to McCarthy.
Sitting House Speaker John Boehner recently announced that he’ll resign at the end of the month. McCarthy, his deputy, was seen as a natural pick to take over. But he’s come under fire in recent days for suggesting the investigation into the 2012 Benghazi attack was political in nature, even bragging that Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers were taking a hit because of it.
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After the gaffe, Chaffetz told MSNBC last week that McCarthy was “absolutely wrong” and that the California lawmaker should apologize.








