What will the Speaker vote look like?
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"Put a bunch of ER docs in congress. I can’t think of a group better able to wheedle, beg, convince, threaten, manipulate, and occasionally gaslight reluctant colleagues into doing their jobs. Every session will be short because we got bored. Everybody wins."
You know, that's not wrong.
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There is a full person-by-person tracker here btw:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/01/04/us/politics/house-speaker-vote-tally.html
Summary:
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@89th said in What will the Speaker vote look like?:
There is a full person-by-person tracker here btw:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/01/04/us/politics/house-speaker-vote-tally.html
Summary:
McCarthy's vote counts seem to be monotonically decreasing.
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@89th said in What will the Speaker vote look like?:
I am surprised MTG is voting with McCarthy, whereas her other bozos like Boebert and Gaetz aren't.
Rumour has it that Boebert and Greene don't exactly get on
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Op-ed/analysis on why McCarthy won't ask Democrats for help to be elected Speaker:
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/05/politics/mccarthy-speaker-vote-stalemate-what-matters/index.html
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@Jolly said in What will the Speaker vote look like?:
the name floating around that might work is Zeldin.
I've heard that rumor as well. However, there are some who think that the Speaker of the House must be a member of the House of Representatives. I'm not sure if that's a constitutional requirement, however.
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https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/the-speaker-has-to-come-from-the-house/
Matthew Franck addressed this question in NRO the last time McCarthy was having trouble getting to the Speakership, in 2015, arguing that the Constitution implies that a Speaker has to be a member of the House.
Among his points: Accepting a non-member as Speaker would open the door to letting a Cabinet member be Speaker, contrary to the aim of the Constitution’s incompatibility clause. I’d add that you would also then have the possibility of a Speaker who, unlike executive officers, judges, and the actual members of Congress, had not taken an oath to the Constitution.
Franck ended one of his posts on the subjects this way:
"The customary understanding that the speaker must be a member comports with commonsense, natural use of language in context. If you sponsored a boys’ football team and said to them “choose your captain,” it is hardly likely that they would go outside their ranks to make their choice. They would be understanding you to require them to choose, from among themselves, the first among equals to stand forth and speak for the whole team. And they’d be right. It is just possible that one wiseacre would be tempted to try out “parlor-trick textualism,” as I called it, an overworked literalism that defeats the purpose of what was required of those trusted with a decision. “How about my little sister?” But you would be justified in saying, “Pipe down. You know what I meant."
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@Axtremus said in What will the Speaker vote look like?:
And what have the 20 holdouts conceded and compromised on?
Bupkis.