Kevin McCarthyās speakership ended as it beganāin chaos. Unprepared to build coalitions, unwilling to stand firm against the crazies in his own caucus, and, ultimately, unable to count votes at the moment when vote counting mattered most, the California Republican was deposed on Tuesday amid a cacophony of threats, insults, accusations, and whining.
So how did House Republicans propose to address the most serious leadership crisis they have experienced since their ill-conceived attempt to remove Bill Clinton blew up a quarter century ago on scandal-plagued House Speaker Newt Gingrich and his hapless successor, adulterous Louisiana Republican Robert Livingston?
As of Thursday morning, two peopleāHouse majority leader Steve Scalise and House Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordanāhave declared their candidacy for the speakership. But some House Republicans are pushing an even more chaotic prospect: Speaker of the House Donald Trump.
Within hours of the Houseās 216-210 vote to vacate McCarthyās speakership, Texas Republican Troy Nehls declared, āThis week, when the US House of Representatives reconvenes, my first order of business will be to nominate Donald J Trump for speaker of the US House of Representatives. President Trump, the greatest president of my lifetime, has a proven record of putting America first and will make the House great again.ā
Even by the unusually high levels of political obsequiousness that are observed when Republican members of Congress start talking about Trump, Nehlsās announcement stood out by blending desperate hints of tragedy and farce. So, of course, Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene decided to outdo him, posting a picture on Wednesday of Trump wearing an outsize āMake America Great Againā cap and wielding the House gavel. āThis is my choice for speaker of the House!ā announced Greene.
Other House Republicans jumped into the āTrump for speakerā clown car, and by Tuesday night, Fox News host Sean Hannity was reporting, āSources telling me at this hour some House Republicans have been in contact with and have started an effort to draft former president Donald Trump to be the next Speaker, and I have been told that President Trump might be open to helping the Republican Party, at least in the short term, if necessary.ā
Trump dubbed the prospect āinteresting.ā
āLots of people have been calling me about speaker, all I can say is weāll do whatever is best for the country and for the Republican Party,ā Trump said Wednesday morning. Pressed to clarify whether he might actually serve as speaker for the remainder of the 118th Congress, Trump said he was ātotally focusedā on his 2024 presidential bid. But then he added, āIf I can help them during the process, Iāll do it.ā
Was Trump saying heād take a temporary speakership? Maybe. Maybe not.
It didnāt matter to Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. Somewhere in the word salad that was served up by the former president, Ramaswamyāwho has urged House Republicans to ask themselves, āIs chaos really such a bad thing?āāheard what he wanted to hear. Of the prospect that Trump might be given the gavel and control of the House, Ramaswamy declared on Wednesday, āThis isnāt crazy. We need to shake things up in there.ā
Actually, it is crazy, for a variety of reasons. But one reason is particularly worthy of consideration.
While itās true that someone who is not a member of the House can serve as speaker, Trump is currently barred from holding the position. Who says? The House Republican Conference.
According to the Conference Rules of the 118th Congress, āIf a member of Elected Republican Leadershipā¦publicly announces his or her intention to seek other elected office in Federal, state, or local government, that Member shall resign from such leadership position.ā
Trump is an announced presidential candidate. So he is precluded by his own partyās rule from serving as speaker.
Pumpkin head does not qualify:
āA member of the Republican Leadership shall step aside if indicted for a felony for which a sentence of two or more yearsā imprisonment may be imposed,ā the Republican Conference Rules of the 118th Congress state.
Bold of you to assume that they follow their own rules.
Oh they wonāt, but itās a beautiful thing for Democrats to say that Republicans broke their own rules for this.