Republicans struggle to elect a speaker of the House
Kevin McCarthy’s floundering bid for the role augurs more dysfunction in Washington
AMERICAN AND British conservatives are distinct species. But in one respect—a cannibalistic impulse to kill and consume their leaders—they are similar. On January 3rd Kevin McCarthy, the Republican congressman who for the better part of a decade has yearned to be elected speaker of the House of Representatives, found himself on the receiving end. Though Republicans secured a narrow majority in midterm elections in November, a contingent of hardline congressmen have banded together to deny their party leader the absolute majority he needs to obtain the speakership.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “The chaos Congress”
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