In the U.S. House, the first vote is the prerequisite to every other vote. Members are expected to assemble on the first day of a new Congress and choose a House speaker who can serve as the institution’s presiding officer. He or she can then swear in members, rules can be adopted and implemented, committees can take shape, and the chamber can begin to function as it should.
But the vote for speaker is the first domino. Until it falls, no other dominos can follow.
With this in mind, as Republicans struggle to a historic degree to choose a leader, the House, at least for now, is struggling to even exist. The New York Times explained overnight:
The personal and political drama that is playing out on the House floor as Representative Kevin McCarthy tries and fails repeatedly to become speaker has broader implications for the country, raising questions about what happens when one chamber of the legislative branch ceases to function. Without a speaker, the United States House of Representatives essentially becomes a useless entity.
This is not a situation in which elected officials can simply get to work on other issues while the speaker matter drags on: The institution that’s supposed to have 434 members right now instead has 434 representatives-elect, none of whom have any power or authority, except for the ability to vote for speaker.
And as of now, that’s not going especially well.
Indeed, it’s hard not to notice that as 2022 came to an end, House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy and his members screamed bloody murder about an omnibus spending package that funded government operations through the end of the fiscal year. What they demanded at the time was a stopgap spending bill that would give the incoming GOP majority in the lower chamber a chance to exert its will in the process.
“Don’t worry,” McCarthy effectively told senators, “House Republicans can be counted on to pass a good bill.”
Senate Republican leaders ignored the pleas, and right about now, we can all be thankful that they did — because if GOP House members can’t even choose a speaker, the idea that they could pass spending legislation that would prevent a shutdown is plainly laughable.








