House Republicans on Tuesday selected Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., as their latest nominee to become speaker. It was a grueling process, as Emmer went through five rounds of voting, overcoming competition from seven of his colleagues, to finally become the new speaker-designate. That lasted about four hours before Emmer suddenly dropped out of the race, leaving the GOP back at square one.
Again.
Despite winning a majority of Republican votes Tuesday, Emmer rapidly became the latest would-be leader of the people’s House unable to scrape together enough support to win on the House floor. He joins Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., and Judiciary Committee chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, on the GOP’s discard pile, alongside former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. And it looks like that pile is due to grow, with nobody set to break the cycle that has been playing on loop for three weeks.
The final round of Tuesday’s voting came down to Emmer and Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., the vice chair of the GOP Conference. The final secret-ballot tally was followed up with a roll call vote of the caucus to see who would support Emmer on the House floor. The results weren’t encouraging for Emmer, as 26 Republicans voted either “present” or for someone else. That’s at least four times as many as the four to six votes he could afford to lose (assuming Democrats remained united against him).
Many of the holdouts were members of the far-right wing of the caucus. Ahead of Tuesday morning’s vote, Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., chair of the House Freedom Caucus, told reporters that he was “concerned” about Emmer’s voting record. That included votes in favor of the debt ceiling deal that McCarthy and President Joe Biden hammered out, the short-term funding bill that triggered McCarthy’s ouster and last year’s repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act. Emmer may have been able to survive all those sensible votes, except for one thing: He also (gasp!) voted to certify Biden’s win in the 2020 election.
As the head of the National Republican Congressional Committee that year, Emmer had an interest in declaring that the results of that year’s races were legitimate. (Also: The results of that year’s races were legitimate.) Moreover, let’s not forget that Emmer still did his best to straddle the line, suggesting that some of the practices in the election were “questionable” while not embracing the most extreme of former President Donald Trump’s lies. But that didn’t matter to Trump, who sent out a post on Truth Social on Tuesday afternoon completely shredding any chance that Emmer could survive a floor vote. Emmer knew the jig was up at that point, according to NBC News, leading to his stunning decision to relinquish his short-lived shot at becoming speaker.








