House GOP selects Jordan as speaker candidate, teeing up House-wide vote
Kevin McCarthy was ousted as speaker last week
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House Republicans selected a new candidate for speaker on Friday after days of disarray kicked off by former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's historic ouster from the job.
House Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, was nominated for the position in a closed-door House GOP conference earlier Friday. Jordan won 124 votes to Rep. Austin Scott's 81 — an underwhelming show for the race's frontrunner.
Scott, a member with a comparatively lower profile, jumped into the race minutes before it began.
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GEORGIA GOP REP AUSTIN SCOTT ANNOUNCES BID FOR HOUSE SPEAKER
After Jordan's nomination, Republicans launched into a second secret ballot vote, this time gauging support on who will support Jordan on the House floor now that he's the nominee.
Fifty-five House Republicans said they would vote against Jordan on that vote. He can only afford to lose four Republican votes to still win the speakership.
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House lawmakers are now going home for the weekend with a vote for speaker possibly expected on Tuesday, two sources told Fox News Digital. Jordan has said he does not want to launch a House-wide vote until Republicans can huddle together yet again.
HOUSE GOP LAUNCH SERIOUS TALKS ABOUT RULE UPHEAVAL AFTER SCALISE'S STUNNING EXIT FROM SPEAKER RACE
Republicans hastily scheduled a candidate forum to pick their new leader on Friday afternoon after multiple measures aimed at raising the threshold to nominate someone failed.
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It's the second time House Republicans had to pick a candidate in the wake of McCarthy's ouster. Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., won a majority of 113 votes via secret ballot on Wednesday in the GOP's first attempt to choose a replacement for McCarthy, R-Calif.
But fast-growing opposition to his bid forced Scalise to drop out of the race on Thursday night.
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House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, had been the expected frontrunner in the race, while Georgia Republican Rep. Austin Scott surprised many — including, it appeared, himself — when he entered the race after Republicans' closed-door conference meeting earlier on Friday.
"When I woke up this morning, I had no intention of doing this. It took me a long time to even get to my wife to tell, her call our friends, be in prayer, because we're not — we haven't done any preparation or any whipping," Scott told reporters. "But I believe if we as Republicans are going to make the majority, we have to do the right things the right way. And we're not doing that right now."