As the first day of the new Congress approached, the most frequently referenced number on Capitol Hill was four. With a House Republican majority with 222 members, GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy and his allies realized he could lose no more than four of his own members if he was going to become speaker.
With this in mind, as 2022 came to an end, the party leadership had a problem: Five House Republicans — Arizona’s Andy Biggs, Florida’s Matt Gaetz, Virginia’s Bob Good, South Carolina’s Ralph Norman, and Montana’s Matthew Rosendale — said they’d oppose McCarthy’s bid, and they showed no signs of backing down. If members of this “Never Kevin” contingent stuck together, and they vowed to do exactly that, McCarthy would fall one vote short.
This week, the arithmetical problem intensified, as a group of nine conservative members released a written statement saying they’d heard the GOP leader’s latest pitch, and it wasn’t good enough for them. These nine skeptics were on top of the five aforementioned McCarthy opponents, bringing the new total to 14 — or 10 more than McCarthy could tolerate.
Yesterday, as members stopped talking and negotiating, and instead started voting, the tally proved to be even higher than many expected. Politico reported:
At the heart of Kevin McCarthy’s struggles for the speakership is a bloc of roughly two dozen conservative House Republicans opposed to his elevation. It’s a mix of veterans of the Tea Party class, newly elected members and perennial thorns in the side of leadership.
For those keeping score, here’s the full list, in alphabetical order:








