Six months into his tenure, it’s likely that House Speaker Mike Johnson thought the job would be easier. When the Louisiana Republican received the gavel in October — he was, alas, his party’s fifth choice — he almost certainly couldn’t have imagined where he’d find himself in mid-April.
Nevertheless, there Johnson sits, watching his members quit, fail to show up for his retreat focused on conference unity, humiliate him on procedural votes, reject his clumsy attempts at governing, force him to rely on Democratic votes to advance must-pass legislation, and take increasingly credible steps to fire him.
It was against this backdrop that the beleaguered House speaker spoke to reporters at a Capitol Hill press conference yesterday. A Washington Post report highlighted some of the GOP leader’s more pointed comments.
“I am not resigning,” Johnson said defiantly at a news conference Tuesday, calling the threat “absurd” as Republicans are “trying to do their job.” “We need steady leadership. We need steady hands on the wheel,” he said. “Look, I regard myself as a wartime speaker.”
When I first started seeing reports about the congressman referring to himself as “a wartime speaker,” I more or less assumed he was referring to ongoing crises in Ukraine and the Middle East. It seemed a bit hyperbolic — usually, U.S. House speakers refer to themselves as “wartime” leaders when it’s the United States at war — but it didn’t seem worth making a fuss about.
The problem, however, was that there was some ambiguity in Johnson’s unscripted rhetoric.
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA): “I regard myself as a wartime Speaker… Former Speaker Newt Gingrich posted a couple days ago … that this is the hardest challenge that's faced a Speaker probably in the history of the country … comparable to the Civil War, but maybe worse.” pic.twitter.com/gh2fMh71gl
— The Recount (@therecount) April 16, 2024
In context, a reporter asked the House speaker for his response to efforts, launched by members of his own conference, to oust him. After declaring that he wouldn’t resign, and expressing his disgust with the entire motion-to-vacate plot, Johnson shared a broader perspective about his political vision.








